Membrane Structure and Organization

Membrane Structure and Organization

Membrane Structure and Organization

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Fluid Mosaic Model & Components - Membrane Medley

  • Fluid Mosaic Model: Proposed by Singer & Nicolson (1972). Describes membrane as a dynamic, 2D fluid solution of lipids and globular proteins. "Fluid" implies mobility; "Mosaic" refers to embedded proteins.
  • Major Components:
    • Lipids (≈50%):
      • Phospholipids: Amphipathic; form basic bilayer structure.
      • Cholesterol: Buffers fluidity; ↑ at low temp, ↓ at high temp.
      • Glycolipids: Outer leaflet; cell recognition.
    • Proteins (≈50%):
      • Integral (transmembrane): Span bilayer; channels, transporters.
      • Peripheral: Loosely attached; enzymes, signaling.
    • Carbohydrates (<10%):
      • Form glycocalyx on outer surface.
      • Part of glycoproteins & glycolipids; cell recognition, adhesion. Fluid Mosaic Model of Cell Membrane

⭐ Lipid rafts, microdomains rich in cholesterol and sphingolipids, are crucial for signal transduction and protein trafficking.

Membrane Lipids Deep Dive - Fatty Fences

  • Amphipathic Bilayer Formers: Lipids with hydrophilic heads & hydrophobic tails.
    • Phospholipids (Major):
      • Structure: Glycerol backbone, 2 fatty acids, phosphate group, alcohol.
      • Examples:
        • Phosphatidylcholine (Lecithin): Most common.
        • Phosphatidylethanolamine (Cephalin).
        • Phosphatidylserine (PS): Inner leaflet; flips out as an apoptosis "eat me" signal.
        • Phosphatidylinositol (PI): Signal transduction (e.g., $PIP_2$ precursor).
        • Cardiolipin: Inner mitochondrial membrane; essential for respiratory chain complexes.
    • Sphingolipids:
      • Sphingosine backbone (amino alcohol).
      • Sphingomyelin: Myelin sheath; also a phospholipid.
    • Cholesterol:
      • Steroid nucleus; amphipathic.
      • Buffers membrane fluidity: ↓ fluidity at ↑ temps, ↑ fluidity at ↓ temps.
    • Glycolipids (Outer Leaflet Exclusively):
      • Lipid + carbohydrate chain.
      • Functions: Cell recognition (e.g., ABO blood group antigens), adhesion, receptors.
      • Types: Cerebrosides, Globosides, Gangliosides (contain NANA/sialic acid).

High-Yield Fact: Cholesterol acts as a bidirectional regulator of membrane fluidity, preventing membranes from becoming too fluid at high temperatures and too rigid at low temperatures.

Membrane Structure and Composition A

Membrane Proteins & Functions - Cellular Concierges

Membrane Structure and Components

  • Classification & Location:
    • Integral (Transmembrane): Embedded within or span bilayer (e.g., ion channels, GPCRs). Amphipathic.
    • Peripheral: Bound to membrane surface (integral proteins or lipid heads) by non-covalent bonds (e.g., spectrin, ankyrin).
    • Lipid-Anchored: Covalently attached to lipids within bilayer (e.g., G proteins, GPI-anchored proteins like CD55).
  • Major Functions:
    • Transport: Channels (aquaporins), carriers (GLUTs), pumps (Na+/K+ ATPase).
    • Enzymatic Activity: E.g., adenylyl cyclase, phospholipase C.
    • Signal Transduction: Receptors (e.g., insulin receptor, adrenergic receptors).
    • Cell-Cell Recognition: Glycoproteins (e.g., ABO antigens).
    • Intercellular Joining: Cadherins, occludins.
    • Cytoskeletal Attachment: Integrins.

⭐ Defects in spectrin or ankyrin (peripheral proteins) can lead to hereditary spherocytosis, causing fragile, sphere-shaped RBCs.

Membrane Dynamics & Specializations - Fluidity & Function Hubs

  • Membrane Fluidity: Dynamic; vital for cell movement, signaling.
    • ↑ Fluidity Factors: ↑Temp, ↓FA length, ↑Unsaturation (kinks).
    • Cholesterol: Bidirectional buffer (↑fluidity at ↓temp; ↓fluidity at ↑temp).
    • Lipid Movements: Lateral (fast), rotation, flexion. Transverse (flip-flop) slow, enzyme-mediated (flippases, floppases, scramblases).
  • Membrane Asymmetry: Uneven lipid/protein distribution.
    • Outer: PC, Sphingomyelin, Glycolipids. Inner: PS (apoptosis signal), PE.
  • Glycocalyx: Outer carbohydrate coat (glycoproteins & glycolipids).
    • Functions: Protection, cell recognition (ABO groups), adhesion.
  • Lipid Rafts: Cholesterol/sphingolipid-rich microdomains; signaling platforms.
    • Caveolae: Flask-shaped rafts (caveolin).

    ⭐ Lipid rafts: crucial organizing hubs for cell signaling, boosting response efficiency & viral entry.

Lipid rafts and signaling

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Fluid Mosaic Model: Proteins float in a fluid lipid bilayer.
  • Key Membrane Lipids: Phospholipids, cholesterol (fluidity buffer), glycolipids (recognition).
  • Membrane Proteins: Integral (transmembrane), Peripheral (surface), Lipid-anchored.
  • Fluidity: ↑ with unsaturated fatty acids & ↑ temperature; cholesterol acts as a buffer.
  • Membrane Asymmetry: Lipids (e.g., Phosphatidylserine in inner leaflet) & proteins are unevenly distributed.
  • Lipid Rafts: Sphingolipid and cholesterol-rich microdomains for cell signaling.
  • Glycocalyx: Outer carbohydrate coat for cell recognition, adhesion, and protection.

Practice Questions: Membrane Structure and Organization

Test your understanding with these related questions

In a preterm baby with respiratory distress syndrome, which of the following lipids would be deficient?

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Flashcards: Membrane Structure and Organization

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The lipid molecules in the cell membrane are predominantly _____

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

The lipid molecules in the cell membrane are predominantly _____

phospholipids

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