Principles Of Cell And Membrane Function Flashcards

1
Q

Which phospholipids are primarily located in the outer leaflet of the cell membrane?

A
  • Phosphatidylcholine

- Sphingomyelin

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2
Q

Which phospholipids are primarily located in the inner leaflet of the cell membrane?

A
  • Phosphatidylethanolamine
  • Phosphatidylserine
  • Phosphatidylinositol
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3
Q

What is the significance of phosphatidylinositol?

A

It is a substrate for signal transduction via PLC

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4
Q

How does aspirin work to reduce clotting?

A

Blocking cyclooxygenase

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5
Q

How is the rate of Diffusion calculated for substances which diffuse through simple diffusion?

A

J (Rate) = -P (Permeability) * A (Surface Area) * [Ci-C0] (concentration gradient)

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6
Q

What is the partition coefficient (Beta)?

A
  • Used to quantify interactions of molecules within the lipid portion of the bilateral of a membrane
  • The more lipid soluble the molecule, the greater the rate of diffusion across the bilayer
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7
Q

What is the glycocalyx?

A

A layer of glycoproteins across the cell membrane which help to trap and digest, protect against toxic substance, or adhere to substances for uptake

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8
Q

What is the relevance of the

Nernst equation?

A

The Nernst equation describes the equilibrium potential for an ion. That is the potential across a
membrane that will produce an electrical force
equal and opposite to the chemical force
produced by the difference in concentration of the
ion across the membrane

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9
Q

Explain the role of aquaporins and vasopressin in the renal collecting ducts.

A
  • Cells of the renal collecting ducts contain AQP3/4 in the basolateral membrane
  • In the absence of vasopressin, There is no way for water to be reabsorbed into the blood.
  • In the presence of vasopressin, AQP is inserted into the apical membrane allowing water to move from urine to blood.
  • In the presence of vasopressin, urea recycling is increased
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10
Q

What are the two primary ways glucose is transported?

A
  • Facilitated diffusion

- Secondary transport

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11
Q

Describe the site and primary characteristics of the GLUT 1 receptor?

A
  • Brain, RBC, Endothelium, Muscle, Adipose

- Broad expression, high affinity

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12
Q

Describe the site and primary characteristics of the GLUT 2 receptor?

A
  • Liver, Pancreas, intestine

- Low affinity, high capacity sensor

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13
Q

Describe the site and primary characteristics of the GLUT 3 receptor?

A
  • Brain, Placenta, testes

- Primary GLUT in neurons

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14
Q

Describe the site and primary characteristics of the GLUT 4 receptor?

A
  • Skeletal/cardiac muscle, adipose

- High affinity

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15
Q

Describe the site and primary characteristics of the GLUT 5 receptor?

A
  • Small Intestine, Sperm

* *- Transports fructose

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16
Q

What process allows glucose to continually enter the cell by lowering intracellular glucose?

A
  • Conversion Of Glucose to G6P via Hexokinase
17
Q

Describe the pathology of Cystic Fibrosis?

A
  • Autosomal recessive disease
  • defect in CFTR which is an ATP binding transporter which functions as a Cl- channel, while also regulating other membrane transporters
18
Q

What is P-g, and what is it’s significance?

A
  • P-glycoprotein or ABCB1
  • Common cause of individual variation of response to drugs
  • ATP-dependent efflux pump with broad substrate deficiency
  • Likely a defense mechanism against toxins
19
Q

Differentiate SGLT1 and SGLT2.

A
  • SGLT1 is in the intestinal mucosa, as well as proximal tubules of the kidney
  • SGLT1 is approximately 2% of renal glucose reabsorption
  • SGLT2 is 1 Glu/1Na+ transporter, while SGLT1 is 1Glu/2 Na+
20
Q

Describe Why Oral rehydration therapy works for cholera.

A
  • Na+ and Glu are cotransported from the gut to the blood.

- ORT using water with sodium Potassium, and glucose can increase uptake of water.

21
Q

How does caveolae endocytosis differ from many other types of endocytosis?

A

It is clathrin independent

22
Q

What is 2,4-dinitrophenol?

A
  • Metabolic protein which uncoupled oxidative phosphorylation
  • Carries proteins across my membrane
  • results in hyperthermia
23
Q

What is Sodium Azide?

A
  • Metabolic poison
  • Inhibits Cytochrome C oxidase (Complex IV)
  • affects organs with high rates of respiration