Membrane Transport Proteins - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 42
About This Presentation
Title:

Membrane Transport Proteins

Description:

Carrier proteins - mediate passive, active or cotransport ... ABC superfamily: bacterial permeases, MDR transport proteins and CFTR protein. Uniport Transport ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:349
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 43
Provided by: juliee5
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Membrane Transport Proteins


1
Membrane Transport
2
Permeability of Lipid Bilayer
Fig. 15-1
3
Transmembrane forces acting upon solutes
  • Uncharged solutes chemical (concentration)
    gradient
  • Charged solutes electrochemical gradient, e.g.,
    affected by concentration gradient of solute and
    membrane potential

4
(No Transcript)
5
Fig. 15-9
6
Membrane Transport Proteins
  • Integral, multipass transmembrane proteins
  • Selective for specific small molecule(s)
  • Types
  • Channel proteins - mediate passive transport only
    of ions or water can be gated
  • Carrier proteins - mediate passive, active or
    cotransport of ions and small hydrophilic
    molecules (e.g., amino acids, sugars,
    nucleotides, inorganic phosphate, etc.)

7
Note large, relatively non-selective pores,
e.g., porins and gap junctions, are used only for
special cases of intracellular or direct
intercellular exchange, respectively chemical
gradients across the plasma membrane would be
destroyed if these structures were open to the
extracellular environment.
8
Carrier Proteins
  • Specific (and reversible) binding of solute
    similarities to enzyme kinetics
  • Switching between cytoplasmic and outside faces
  • Can mediate passive transport (facilitated
    diffusion), active transport or cotransport

9
Fig. 15-5
10
Importance of active transport used to establish
and maintain gradients, e.g., to create
differential between intra- and extracellular
concentrations of transported components role in
osmotic balance of cells ion gradients are
ultimately responsible for electrical polarity of
membranes
11
(No Transcript)
12
  • Cotransport one solute moves down its
    electrochemical gradient, providing the necessary
    free energy to transport the other solute against
    its electrochemical gradient (a.k.a. secondary
    active transport)
  • Symport the two solutes move in the same
    direction, e.g. Na/glucose symport
  • Antiport the two solutes move in opposite
    directions, e.g., HCO3-/Cl- antiport

Fig. 15-3(b)
13
Specific Examples of Carrier Proteins
  • GLUT1 uniport of mammalian cells
  • AE1 protein of erythrocytes HCO3-/Cl- antiport
  • Na/glucose symport (transcellular transport)
  • Four classes of ATPases
  • P-class ATPases Ca2-ATPases, H-ATPases in
    plasma membranes, Na/K-ATPase
  • F-class ATPases we will discuss specific
    examples in mitochondria and chloroplast lectures
  • V-class ATPases H-ATPase
  • ABC superfamily bacterial permeases, MDR
    transport proteins and CFTR protein

14
Uniport Transport
  • How is Uniport Transport different from Passive
    Diffusion?
  • The rate of facilitate transport by uniporters is
    higher than passive diffusion.
  • Transport is specific. Each uniporter transports
    only a specific type of molecule.
  • Transport occurs via a limited number of
    uniporter molecules, rather than throughout the
    phospholipid bilayer.

15
Fig. 15-5
16
GLUT1 UNIPORT
Fig. 15-7
17
Anion Transport Across Erythrocyte Membrane
Fig. 15-20(a)
18
Anion Transport Across Erythrocyte Membrane
Fig. 15-20(b)
19
(No Transcript)
20
The Four Classes of ATP-Powered Transport Proteins
Fig. 15-10
21
V-Class H-ATPases in Acid-Secreting Cell
Fig. 15-14
22
Histidine Permease (ABC Transporter) of
Gram-Negative Bacterium
Fig. 15-15
23
Structural Model for Mammalian MDR1 Protein
Fig. 15-16
24
Figure 15-17
25
Mechanism of Action of Muscle Ca2-ATPase
Fig. 15-11
26
Catalytic Subunit of Muscle Ca2-ATPase
Fig. 15-12
27
(No Transcript)
28
Structure and Net Functional Activity of
Na/K-ATPase
Fig. 15-13(a)
29
Detailed Mechanism of Action of Na/K-ATPase
Fig. 15-13(b)
30
(No Transcript)
31
Importance of Na/K-ATPase
  • Establishes large chemical concentration gradient
    of Na across plasma membrane of animal cells,
    which is used for
  • Osmotic regulation of animal cells
  • Cotransport of metabolites nutrient uptake by
    animal cells
  • Contributes (10) to membrane potential pump is
    electrogenic (3 positive charges go out but only
    two positive charges come in)
  • Responsible for quick, active regeneration of
    resting membrane potential in excitable cells
    (neurons, muscle) these cells generate action
    potentials, which are produced by rapid changes
    in membrane potential caused by the rapid flow of
    Na and K ions across the membrane through ion
    channels

32
Fig. 15-23
33
Nutrient uptake (transcellular transport) by
intestinal epithelial cells of mammals
  • Na/K-ATPase in basolateral membrane keeps
    intracellular concentration of Na low.
  • Na/glucose symport in apical membrane
    cotransports glucose from lumen of intestine into
    epithelial cell.
  • Glucose uniport in basolateral membrane passively
    transports glucose out of the intestinal cell
    into the extracellular fluid glucose then
    diffuses into nearby capillary.
  • Tight junctions between epithelial cells prevent
    glucose from diffusing back into gut lumen tight
    junctions also maintain membrane segregation of
    different transporters to apical and basolateral
    membranes, respectively.
  • The basolateral location of the Na/K-ATPase in
    the epithelial cells ensures that Na is pumped
    into the extracellular space, instead of back
    into the gut lumen. What is the advantage of
    this directionality of Na transport?

34
Fig. 15-25
35
Fig.s 15-18 15-19
36
(No Transcript)
37
Fig. 15-28
Fig. 15-29
38
(No Transcript)
39
Osmotic Regulation of Animal and Plant Cells
  • Animal cells minimize difference between the
    total solute concentration of the extracellular
    and intracellular fluids
  • Plant cells function best when they are
    hypoosmotic with respect to the extracellular
    fluid and are in a turgid state (note importance
    of cell wall and vacuole in
    this process).

40
Fig. 15-22
41
Major Plant/Animal Differences
  • Na/K ATPase and Na-symport in animals
  • H (proton) ATPase and H-symport in plants
  • Osmolarity
  • animal cells are isoosmotic with respect to the
    extracellular fluid (ECF)
  • plant cells are hyperosmotic with respect to the
    ECF and are turgid

42
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com