what is the hydrophilic bilayer composed of
- hydrophobic tails
what is the role of cholesterol in the cell membrane
- stiffens membrane
what are the 3 possible locations of proteins in/around cell membrane
what is the location of carbohydrates in relation to the cell membrane and what types are there
- glycoproteins, glycolipids
what are the 3 functions of the lipid bilayer
The glycocalyx layer is formed by…
Short carbohydrate chains bound to proteins and lipids
what are the main functions of proteins
what are the 2 types of cell adhesion molecules
- Integrins (span membrane to link intra and extracellular environments)
what are occlusion/tight junctions
join neighbouring cells together to prevent diffusion
what are anchoring/desmosome junctions
they provide mechanical support, anchor cells together
what are communicating/gap junctions
they create pores to allow the movement of molecules between 2 cells
what are the 2 types of passive transport
- electrical gradient
during passive transport where do cations move to
cations move towards -vely charged areas
what does Fick’s Law of diffusion relate to
what is an electrochemical gradient
Where an electrical and a chemical concentration gradient may be acting on a particular ion at the same time
define osmosis
how is osmolarity calculated
Using molar concn (mM) and number of osmotically active particles (n)
150mM NaCl has osmolarity = ?
150 x 2 (Na+ and Cl-) = 300mOsm
define tonicity
effect a solution has on cell volume
what effect does a hypotonic solution have on cell volume
increases cell volume
what effect does a hypertonic solution have on cell volume
decreases cell volume
what happens during carrier-mediated transport
substance binds to specific carrier and changes its conformation to transport it
what effects carrier-mediated transport
what is facilitated diffusion