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STRUCTURE & TRANSPORT Prof. K.M. Chan Rm. 513B, BMSB, Dept. of Biochemistry Chinese University Tel: 3163-4420 email: kingchan_at_cuhk.edu.hk; chankingming_at_gmail.com – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: MEMBRANES: STRUCTURE & TRANSPORT


1
MEMBRANESSTRUCTURE TRANSPORT
Prof. K.M. Chan Rm. 513B, BMSB, Dept. of
Biochemistry Chinese University Tel
3163-4420 email kingchan_at_cuhk.edu.hk
chankingming_at_gmail.com
2
Membranes Functions, Structures, Properties, and
Membrane Proteins
  • A physical barrier to separate the inside and
    outside of the cells.
  • Biological membrane consists of lipids, proteins
    and carbohydrates.
  • How do they come together to form a
    self-organized membrane? E.g. Membrane proteins
    how do they get there?

THE FLUID_MOSAIC MODEL OF PLASMA MEMBRANE
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cell_membrane
3
2. Membrane Transport
  • Small and hydrophobic molecules across the
    membrane by simple diffusion.
  • Facilitated diffusion- membrane proteins can
    speed up the diffusion process.
  • Channels and Ionophores
  • Active transporters- use ATP energy
  • Co-transport systems
  • Cellular membranous processes endocytosis and
    exocytosis.

4
Objectives
  • 1, Understand the chemical properties of fatty
    acids, phospholipids and cholesterol and explain
    how lipid and protein molecules are arranged as a
    bilayer.
  • 2, Explain fluid-mosaic model and its latest
    version.
  • 3, Illustrate how protein molecules can be
    associated with the lipid bilayer use
    erythrocyte membrane as an example.
  • 4, Outline membrane transport mechanisms and
    principles.

5
1. Membrane (Structure, Functions and Properties)
  • 1.1 Functions and properties of membrane
  • 1.2 Fatty acids and phospholipids
  • 1.3 Glycerophospholipids and sphingolipids
  • 1.4 Cholesterol and membrane fluidity
  • 1.5 Fluid-mosaic Model
  • 1.6 Membrane proteins how do they get there?

6
1.1 Functions and properties of membrane
  • Membrane is a selectively permeable barrier
    between the cell and the external environment.
  • Its function is to maintain Homeostasis. Its
    selective permeability allows the cell to
    maintain a constant internal environment.
  • Plasma membranes form compartments
    (compartmentation) within cells.

7
1.1.1 Functions of Cell Membrane are to
  • 1. regulate cell volume
  • (control water in/ out)
  • 2. maintain intracellular pH
  • (H regulation)
  • 3. selectively regulate ionic composition
    (e.g. Na , K )
  • 4. concentrate metabolic fuel (nutrients, ATP,
    etc)

,
8
Membrane transport system ought to (continued)
  • 5. concentrate and move building blocks (amino
    acids, etc)
  • 6. remove toxic compounds (detoxification, trap
    and/or pump out)
  • 7. generate ionic gradients to maintain
    excitability of nerve and muscle cells
  • 8. control the flow of information within the
    cell, between cells and their environment.

9
1.1.2 Plasma membrane is a semi-permeable
(selective) membrane
Small hydrophobic molecules O2, CO2, N2, benzene
Small uncharged polar molecules H2O, ethanol,
glycerol
Lipid bilayer
Larger uncharged polar molecules glucose, amino
acid, nucleotides
Ions H, Na, HCO3- , K, Ca, Mg2, CL- , etc.
Transporters or channels
The process of diffusion of water is called
osmosis. But why some can diffuse while some
cannot? What criteria are controlling the
diffusion of molecules across the membrane ?
10
1.1.3 Chemical and physical properties of plasma
membranes
  • Sheet-like structure consists of proteins,
    lipids, with carbohydrates attached to them.
  • Non-covalent assemblies of lipids and proteins.
  • The proteins serve the functions as transporters,
    channels, enzymes, signal transducers, etc.
  • The lipid molecules are amphipathic molecules,
    they have both hydrophilic (polar) and
    hydrophobic (non-polar) moieties.
  • Barriers to the flow of charged molecules.

11
Lipids are water insoluble and amphipathic in
nature.
  • Hydrophilic

hydrophobic
A liposome formed with lipid bilayer
hydrophilic
  • Hydrophobic

water
Lipid on the surface of water
Bubbles with soap trapping a layer of water
inside with the detergents at the outside (just
the reverse of the lipid bilayer of plasma
membrane).
Lipid bilayer
hydrophobic
hydrophilic
  • water

hydrophilic
water
water
hydrophobic
12
1.1.4 Characteristics of Plasma membranes
  • Membranes are held up with van der Waals force
    with no covalent interactions among molecules,
    therefore they can fuse together.
  • Hydrophobic interaction also help stabilization
    membrane bilayer.
  • Heat promotes lipid bilayer from gel
    (crystalline) state to fluid state.

http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cell_membrane
Explain why and how a detergent can kill germs??
Why bleach and alcohol can kill bacteria and
viruses??
13
  • Membrane processes like budding, exo- and
    endo-cytosis are common events.
  • By membrane fusion, Golgi complex and move
    proteins to vesicles and surface membrane.
    Secretary proteins are stored in the vesicles,
    their membranes can fuse to the plasma membranes
    to excrete the secretory proteins with
    exocytosis.
  • The mitochondrion has 2 layers of membrane, the
    inner is similar to their descendant of
    procaryotes, the outer from eucaryotes
    indicating its symbiotic origin.

14
1.1.5 Asymmetry of plasma membranes
  • 1. Membrane separates interior and exterior side
    of the cell and the 2 faces of lipid bilayer are
    different in composition and structure, with
    different proteins and phospholipids.
  • The plasma membrane core contain 1/3 cholesterol
    and 2/3 phospholipids and sphingolipids, the
    outer leaflet contains 5 glycolipids.
  • Oligosaccharide chains are attached at outer face
    of lipids or proteins.
  • Shingomyelin and phosphatidylcholine are mainly
    at the outer face of the bilayer.
  • Phosphotidylethanolamine and phosphatidylserine
    are mainly in the inner face.

15
1.2 Fatty acids and phospholipids
  • Membranes have 3 kinds of lipids phospholipids,
    glycolipids, cholesterol
  • Fatty acids (FAs) form the basic structures of
    phospholipids glycolipids
  • Saturated FAs VS Unsaturated FAs
  • Strong van der waals interaction between the
    non-polar hydrocarbon regions of the molecules

16
Fatty acids (FAs) form the basic structures of
phospholipids
1.2.1 Simplified structure of lipid bilayer and
phospholipids
Phospholipid molecule
Hydrophilic head on surface
Polar group
  • water

Hydrophilic head
Phosphate
Hydrophobic core of lipid bilayer
Glycerol
Hydrophobic fatty acid tails
Fatty acid-(unsaturated)
Hydrophilic head to cytoplasm
Fatty acid (saturated)
17
1.2.2 Basic structure of fatty acid chains
saturated and unsaturated.
Saturated Fatty Acids
Hydrophilic carboxyl end Hydrophobic hydrocarbon
(alipathic) tail Forming an amphipathic molecule
Adapted from Alberts et al., 1998. Essential Cell
Biology. An Introduction to Molecular Biology of
the Cell. Garland Pub.Inc.
18
Common saturated fatty acids
19
Triacylglycerols
Oleic Acid
O
C
H2C-O
O
C
HC-O
O
C
H2C-O
Rigid Double bond
The rest of the chain is free to rotate
Fatty acids are stored as fats and oils (energy
reserve) through an ester linkage to glycerol
forming triacylglycerols.
Unsaturated fatty acid (cis double bond)
H2C-OH
HC-OH
Glycerol
H2C-OH
20
Common unsaturated fatty acids
21
Melting points of unsaturated fatty acids are
determined by the number of double bonds (cis CC
bonds rotate 120 O).
Melting points of saturated fatty acids increase
with increasing molecular weight.
Changes from a gel state to a liquid state at
special melting temperature
90
20
Melting Point ºC
Melting Point ºC
80
10
70
0
60
The melting points of saturated fatty acid
increase with increasing molecular weight
-10
50
40
-20
30
8 10 12 14 18 22 26 28
1 2 3 4
Number of carbon
Number of double bonds
22
Properties of fatty acids and membrane
  • Unsaturated fatty acids remain liquid at low
    temperatures and become denatured as the
    temperatures increase, however saturated fatty
    acids are more stable than unsaturated fatty
    acids at high temperatures. E.g. Butter is solid
    at room temperature.
  • The membranes of psychrophilic (cold-loving)
    bacteria have high content of polyunsaturated
    fatty acids.
  • Thermophilic bacteria use mainly saturated fatty
    acids, otherwise their membrane would be too soft
    to maintain cell structure and function at high
    temperature.

23
Summary of membrane function and structure
  • It forms barrier with selective permeability to
    control molecules going across and maintain
    homeostasis
  • It contains lipids, proteins, and carbohydrates
    attached to them
  • Lipids are major components of the membrane with
    phospholipids, glycolipids and they contain
    saturated and unsaturated fatty acids.
  • Membrane lipids are amphipathic
  • We shall look into the chemical architecture of
    the bilayer in next lecture.

24
1.3 Glycerophospholipids and Sphingolipids
  • Two different ways of putting two fatty acid
    chains together as major phospholipids on
    membrane
  • Glycerophospholipids with GLYCEROL linkage, e.g.
    phosphatidyl choline or serine.
  • Sphingolipids are derived from sphingosine, e.g.
    sphingomyelin.

25
Storage lipids (neutral) and Membrane lipids
(polar) with Glycerophospholipids and
Sphingolipids (including glycolipids)
Non Polar Storage Lipids
POLAR MEMBRANE LIPIDS
Phospholipids Glycero-phospholipids
Triacylglycerols, storage lipids (neutral)
Glycolipids Shingolipids (neutral)
Phospholipids Shingolipids


Polysaccharide
Sphingosine
Fatty acid
Phosphate
Polar head group
Glycerol

Monosaccharide
Adapted from Nelson and Cox, 2000. Lehninger
Principles of Biochemistry. Worth Pub.Co.
26
1.3.1 Glycerophospholipids
  • Putting 2 fatty acids (glycerol linkage), the
    third with one phosphate and alcohol head
    together as phosphoglycerides or phospholipids.
  • The two fatty acids one saturated and one
    unsaturated. Glycerol linkage with C1 and C2
    esterified to the carboxyl ends of the FAs.
  • Alcohol head could be replaced with serine,
    choline, etc.

27
(No Transcript)
28
Glycerophospholipids Phosphotidyl ethanolamine,
choline, serine, etc. With ester bonds.
29
2. Sphingolipids are derived from sphingosine.
Adapted from Berg et al, 2002. Biochemistry 5th
ed. (Stryer)
H
H
H
C
HOCH2
C
C
C
(CH2)12
CH3
Trans-4-sphingenine
H
OH
H3N
Sphingolipids are major components of biological
membranes, they are derivatives of the C18 amino
alcohols, e.g. sphingosine
H3N
H
OH
CH2
HO
H
O
Hydrophilic/ charged head group
e.g. Palmitate
C
R1
NH
H
O
O
H3C (H2C)12
C
CH3

P
CH2
N
_
Sphingomyelin
CH3
HO
H
O
O
CH3
Hydrophobic fatty acid chains
30
1.3.2 Sphingomyelins, forming a ceramide first by
adding a fatty acid chain ceramide sphingosine
added with one FA.
Choline head added to ceramide to form a
sphingolipid.

31
Phospholipids, Sphingolipids, cereboside, and
Archaeal lipids.
Glucose or galactose
O
C
R1
NH
H
O
H3C (H2C)12
C
CH2
HO
H
Cerebroside is a glycolipid with sugar residues
always on the extracellular membrane
Adapted from Berg et al, 2002. Biochemistry 5th
ed. (Stryer)
32
1.3.3. Glycolipids Cerebrosides (e.g.
Sphinoglycolipids)
  • Glycosphinolipids
  • (found in animal cells)
  • sugar head
  • (non-polar)

Ceramide
33
1.3.4. Gangliosides 6 of brain lipids, ceramide
oligosaccharides with sialic acid residue(s)
(N-Acetyl-neuraminic acid), excellent for
recognition by antibodies.
The blood groups A, AB, B, and O.
34
1.4 Cholesterol Membrane Fluidity
cholesterol
Increase of temperature
Tightly packed more rigid and lower fluidity
Loosely packed higher fluidity
Explain what chemical properties of lipids could
affect the fluidity of membrane.
35
It fits in lipid bilayer with its polar head and
hydrocarbon tail. It regulates membrane fluidity.
Higher cholesterol content reduce the membrane
fluidity of plasma membrane.
36
1.4.1 Lipid composition of different plasma
membranes note cholesterol contents
37
1.4.2 Cholesterol stays in between fatty acids
with its rigid planar steroid ring
Cholesterol is a metabolic precursor of steroid
hormones it is a member of steroids or lipids
and major component of animal plasma membrane.
Polar Head
Phosphate
Glycerol
Fatty acid-(unsaturated)
Polar Head
Rigid Planar Steroid Ring
Hydrophobic fatty acid tails
Non polar hydrocarbon Tail
38
1.4.3 Cholesterol contents
  • Plasma membrane 25-30
  • Nuclear membrane 10
  • Golgi/R.E.R. 6 - 7
  • Mitochondria outer 4 -5, inner 2 -5
  • Bacterial cells do not have cholesterol, whereas
    in animal cells, cholesterol is a key regulator
    of membrane fluidity.
  • It makes bilayer less fluid (reduce fluidity),
    but it also prevent hydrocarbon chains come
    together to crystallize. It inhibits phase
    transitions.

39
1.5 The Fluid-Mosaic Model (Singer and Nicolson,
1972)
  • Amphipathic lipids stabilized by the hydrophobic
    interaction form the lipid bilayer .
  • Asymmetric property. The components of membranes
    with lipids and proteins are asymmetrically
    oriented the two faces are different.
  • It is a fluid-like structure, with fluidity
    regulated by the number of double bonds in the
    fatty acids (increasing unsaturation increases
    fluidity) and cholesterol content (increasing
    cholesterol decreases fluidity).
  • Lateral movement. Proteins and the components are
    free to move laterally, no or little
    flip-flopping allowed (flippase or transporter is
    needed.

40
The asymmetrical nature of plasma membrane polar
heads of phospholipids and carbohydrates of
glycolipids vary on two sides of the lipid
bilayer protein orientations also vary and are
fixed too.
carbohydrates
Cell Wall
Rotations occur
Lipid bilayer
Integrated Protein (NO flip-flopping)
Peripheral proteins
41
Summary ofthe chemical components and fluidity
of the membrane
  • Three types of structural lipids in membrane
    cholesterol, glycerophospholipids, and
    sphingolipids.
  • Polar heads and sugars attached to
    glycerolphospholipids and sphingolipids have
    special properties and functions.
  • Cholesterol and properties of fatty acids control
    membrane fludity.
  • The fluid mosaic model stated that the membrane
    bilayer is an asymmetric fluid sheet, with
    proteins moving laterally.

42
The Fluid-Mosaic Model (cont)
  • The lipid bilayer forms a permeability barrier to
    polar molecules which can only cross the membrane
    by a specific method via membrane proteins, e.g.
    channel, or transporters).
  • Updated version of membrane model includes
  • a Patching and Capping of membrane proteins.
    Patching means clustering of membrane proteins
    whereas capping refers to the clustered proteins
    move to one end
  • b Lipid rafts rich in sphingolipids and
    cholesterol are found, probably for proteins to
    work on membrane.

43
1.5.2 Dynamic Characteristics of the
Fluid-Mosaic Model of Plasma Membrane
This phenomena is found in lymphocytes as
recognized by specific antibodies on cell surface.
44
Lateral transport modes on the cell surface
A. Transient confinement by Obstacle clusters
B. by Cytoskeleton C. Directed motion D. Random
Diffusion.
B
D
A
C
Lipid Raft
Adapted from Jacobson et al, 1995, Revisiting the
fluid mosaic model of membranes. Science
2681441-1442.
45
1.5.1 Experimental studies of membrane fluidity
  • Lipid molecules synthesized with a spin label
    such as a nitroxide group with an unpaired
    electron that spin to create a paramagnetic
    signal detected by electron spin resonance
    spectroscopy
  • It was shown that a lipid molecule could change
    places with its neighbour in the membrane 10 7
    times every second.
  • Therefore membrane is not rigid structure and
    lipids or proteins are in lateral motion all the
    time.

46
  • Fluorescence recovery photobleaching (FRAP)
    technique is useful in showing the dynamic nature
    of cell surface.
  • Other experiments with antibody show patching and
    capping of cell surface immunoglobulins.
  • Increasing content of cholesterol can lower
    lateral movement (reduced fluidity and blocked
    lateral movement).

47
1.6 Possible ways of proteins get onto the plasma
membrane
(3) Protein attached
(2) Lipoproteins
(1)Trans-membrane Integral protein
N
C
C
C
C
C
Lipid bilayer
N
ßbarrel
N
N
C
Trans-membrane proteins must have hydrophobic
region, usually helical bundles, to get into the
membranes core hydrophobic region hydrophobic
interactions.
N
N
C
N
Adapted from Alberts et al., 1998. Essential Cell
Biology. An Introduction Biology of the Cell.
Garland Pub.Inc.
48
Some integral proteins are bound to the membrane
by covalently attached lipids. E.g. p21 Ras
protein attached to cytoplasmic side of the
membrane via a farnesyl group.
CH3
CH3
p21
C
C
CH2
CH2
Lys-Cys-S-CH2-
C-(CH3)2
CH
CH
CH
CH2
CH2
FARNESYL
Franesyl transferase specifically add farnesyl
group onto p21 protein to facilitate the
anchorage of p21 on cell membrane at the
cytoplasmic side.
49
Glycosylphosphatidyl inositol as a signal
molecule attached on membrane to be activated by
PLC cleavage
N-acetylgalactosamine
O
Mannose-
P
O
O
CH2-CH2-NH2
O
N-Acetylglucosamine
O
O
OH
HO
O
P
O
CH2
OH
OH
O
Inositol
CH3-(CH2)12-C-O-CH
CH3-(CH2)12-C-O-CH2
O
cleavage site of PLC, phospholipase C.
50
1.6.1 Hydrophobic interactions
Trans-membrane proteins must have hydrophobic
region, usually helical bundle(s), to get into
the membranes core hydrophobic region.
Adapted from Alberts et al., 1998. Essential Cell
Biology. An Introduction to Molecular Biology of
the Cell. Garland Pub.Inc.
Hydropathy plot of amino acid sequence can
predict which region of the protein is
hydrophobic enough to get onto the membrane.
51
Halorhodopsin (rhodopsin from Halobacterium) uses
its multiple trans-membrane domain with
hydrophobic helices forming a barrel to get into
the lipid bilayer.
C
N
Retinol inside helical bundles of rhodopsin
52
From protein synthesis to localization of
membrane proteins to the membrane surface
special sorting procedure is needed and the
process is tightly regulated.
  • Hydrophobic helical domains get through the
    membrane during protein synthesis in the ER.
  • After post-translational modification, e.g.
    glycosylation, proteins are sorted and delivered
    to proper places.
  • The orientations of these membrane proteins are
    kept.

nucleus
RER
Golgi
sugar
Plasma membrane
vesicle
53
Non-cytoplasmic side
Cytoplasmic side
vesicle
1
2
Surface membrane
Non-cytoplasmic side
4
Cytoplasmic side
3
Non-cytoplasmic side
54
To hold up the red blood cell, intracellular
protein network holds up the fluid like layer of
plasma membrane with peripheral proteins.
1.6.2 Erythrocyte Membrane Structure
Spectrin

Actin
Tropomyosin
Band 4.1
Ankyrin
Band 3
Transmembrane protein
55
Plasma membrane of erythrocyte
Band
Spectrin a
1
Spectrin ß
2
Band 3 Protein Anion Exchanger
Actin
Anion channel
3
Sugar for recognition
4.1
4.2
5
Actin
6
Glyceraldehyde phosphate dehydrogenase
Tropomyosin
Spectrin aand ß
e-
Integral proteins and peripheral proteins are
associated on plasma membrane
Ankyrin
Low MW
Glycophorin A
SDS-PAGE analysis of RBC membrane proteins
56
Membranes Functions, Structures, Properties, and
Membrane Proteins
  • Summary
  • Membrane forms a physical barrier to separate the
    inside and outside of the cells.
  • The two sides are not equal asymmetric.
  • Fluid-mosaic model properties of membrane,
    structure/function.
  • Used red cell as an example to show how proteins
    link to the membrane.
  • Membrane proteins how do they get there? They
    are made in the RER and Golgi to go to membrane
    via special trafficking routes with orientation
    fixed.

57
Summary (continued)
  • Rotation and lateral motions are allowed, but
    flip flopping is not permitted due to
    bioenergetic reasons.
  • Carbohydrates are attached on the membrane
    proteins or lipid moiety with fatty acid chains
    attachment.
  • Different aliphatic moieties are attached to
    protein to facilitate their incorporation to cell
    membrane. E.g. p21 protein.
  • Integral proteins get into the cell membrane with
    their hydrophobic transmembrane domains which
    consist of helical bundles spanning through the
    membrane. Beta barrel structures are also able to
    put proteins on membrane.

58
Revision Exercises
  • Explain the structure, functions and roles of
    cholesterol in cell membranes.
  • Explain the fluid mosaic model of membrane.
  • Explain the ways that proteins can incorporate in
    the plasma membranes.
  • Describe the chemical architecture of cell
    membrane and compare the structures of membrane
    lipids found in mammalian cells.
  • Why mitochondrial membrane has chemical
    properties similar to bacterial cell membrane?

59
Take Home Exercises
  • State three experiments (e.g. freeze fracture EM,
    photo-bleaching, hybrid cells) to demonstrate the
    dynamic nature of fluid-mosaic model of plasma
    membrane.
  • Explain how scientists studied a the membrane
    proteins of red blood cell (ghosts) and b
    predict the transmembrane helices from amino acid
    sequences using hydropathy plots (use glycophorin
    and bacteriorhodopsin as examples).
  • Elaborate the following statement cholesterol
    has weak amphiphilic character and makes lipid
    bilayer less fluid because it prevents
    hydrocarbon chain to form crystal and increase
    mechanical stability.
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