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Membrane Transport Proteins

Membrane Transport Proteins

Membrane Transport Proteins

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Overview & Protein Types - Gatekeepers Galore

Integral proteins regulating solute passage across membranes. Crucial for cell function. 📌 Channels, Carriers, Pumps: Key transport mechanisms.

  • Main Types:
    • Channels: Pores for rapid, passive ion/water flow. E.g., aquaporins, ion channels (Na+, K+).
      • Gating: Voltage, ligand, mechanical.
    • Carriers: Bind solute, conformational change. Slower.
      • Uniporters, Symporters, Antiporters.
    • Pumps: Active transport via ATP hydrolysis. E.g., Na+/K+ ATPase. Membrane Transport Proteins: Pumps, Channels, Transporters

⭐ Carrier proteins, like GLUTs, show saturation kinetics, a key feature distinguishing them from simple diffusion and channel-mediated transport_api.json(markdown=

Channel Proteins - Speedy Tunnels

  • Form selective, hydrophilic pores for rapid passive transport.
  • Move ions (e.g., $Na^+$, $K^+$, $Ca^{2+}$, $Cl^-$) down electrochemical gradient; speed: 10^7-10^8 ions/sec.
  • Key types by gating mechanism:
    • Voltage-gated: Open/close by Vm changes (e.g., neuronal $Na^+$ channels).
    • Ligand-gated: Activated by ligand binding (e.g., nAChR).
    • Mechanosensitive: Respond to physical deformation (touch, sound).
    • Non-gated (Leak channels): Persistently open; RMP role (e.g., $K^+$ leak channels). ⭐ > Cystic Fibrosis results from mutations in CFTR, an ATP-gated $Cl^-$ channel, affecting epithelial transport. Ion channels in sensory neuron signalingoka

Carrier Proteins - Picky Packers

  • Bind specific solutes; undergo reversible conformational changes for membrane translocation. Slower than ion channels.
  • Exhibit saturation kinetics: $V_{max}$ (max transport rate) & $K_m$ (substrate affinity).
  • Facilitated Diffusion: Passive, down electrochemical gradient; no direct ATP.
    • Uniporter: 1 solute (e.g., GLUT1).
    • Symporter: 2 solutes, same direction (e.g., SGLT1 - Na+/Glucose).
    • Antiporter: 2 solutes, opposite (e.g., Na+/Ca2+ exchanger).
  • 📌 Carriers CARRY, Change, Capped (saturated).

⭐ GLUT4 (muscle, adipose tissue) is insulin-dependent. Insulin promotes its translocation to the plasma membrane, boosting glucose uptake.

Active Transport - Uphill Battles

  • Moves solutes against electrochemical gradient; requires energy (ATP).
  • Primary Active Transport (PAT): Direct ATP use.
    • $Na^+$/$K^+$ ATPase: Pumps 3 $Na^+$ out, 2 $K^+$ in.
    • $Ca^{2+}$ ATPase (SERCA, PMCA): Pumps $Ca^{2+}$ out/into SR.
    • $H^+$/$K^+$ ATPase: Proton pump (e.g., stomach).
  • Secondary Active Transport (SAT): Uses ion gradient (from PAT).
    • Symport (Cotransport): Solute + ion, same direction (e.g., SGLT1: $Na^+$-glucose).
    • Antiport (Counter-transport): Solute + ion, opposite directions (e.g., NCX: $Na^+$/$Ca^{2+}$).

Primary and Secondary Active Transport

⭐ Digoxin inhibits Na+/K+ ATPase, ↑ intracellular Na+, ↓ Na+/Ca2+ exchange, ↑ intracellular Ca2+, ↑ cardiac contractility.

Clinical Connections - Gates Gone Wrong

  • Channelopathies: Genetic disorders of ion channels, affecting cellular excitability.
  • Cystic Fibrosis (CF): Defective CFTR ($Cl⁻$ channel) → viscous secretions.
    • Autosomal recessive. Commonest lethal genetic disease in Caucasians.
  • Long QT Syndromes (LQTS): Cardiac $K⁺$/$Na⁺$ channel defects → arrhythmias, syncope.

    ⭐ Romano-Ward (AD, pure cardiac) & Jervell and Lange-Nielsen (AR, +deafness) are key LQTS types.

  • Periodic Paralysis: Muscle $Na⁺$/$Ca²⁺$/$K⁺$ channel defects → episodic weakness.
    • E.g., Hypokalemic, Hyperkalemic types.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Facilitated diffusion (e.g., GLUTs) is passive, saturable, and specific, using carrier/channel proteins.
  • Active transport requires ATP to move solutes against concentration gradients.
  • Na+/K+ ATPase (3 Na+ out, 2 K+ in) is a crucial primary active transporter.
  • Secondary active transport (e.g., SGLT1) utilizes ion gradients from primary pumps.
  • Ion channels (voltage-gated, ligand-gated, mechanically-gated) exhibit high selectivity.
  • CFTR, an ABC transporter, is vital; its defects cause cystic fibrosis.
  • Aquaporins facilitate rapid water transport across membranes an_d are highly specific for water molecules_

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