5 Cell Membranes and Signaling Chapter 5 Cell Membranes and Signaling Key Concepts 5.1 Biological Membranes Have a Common Structure and Are Fluid 5.2 Passive Transport across Membranes Requires No Input of Energy 5.3 Active Transport Moves Solutes against Their Concentration Gradients 5.4 Large Molecules Cross Membranes via Vesicles Chapter 5 Cell Membranes and Signaling 5.5 The Membrane Plays a Key Role in a Cell’s Response to Environmental Signals 5.6 Signal Transduction Allows the Cell to Respond to Its Environment Chapter 5 Opening Question What role does the cell membrane play in the body’s response to caffeine? Concept 5.1 Biological Membranes Have a Common Structure and Are Fluid What is part of the membrane’s structure? - lipids, proteins, and carbohydrates What is the fluid mosaic model? the general design of membranes Figure 5.1 Membrane Structure Concept 5.1 Biological Membranes Have a Common Structure and Are Fluid What makes up the phospholipid bilayer? • Hydrophilic regions—electrically charged “heads” associate with water molecules • Hydrophobic regions—nonpolar fatty acid “tails” that do not dissolve in water Concept 5.1 Biological Membranes Have a Common Structure and Are Fluid A bilayer is formed when the fatty acid “tails” associate with each other and the polar “heads” face the aqueous environment. Concept 5.1 Biological Membranes Have a Common Structure and Are Fluid Phospholipids may differ in: • Fatty acid chain length • Degree of saturation • Kinds of polar groups present Concept 5.1 Biological Membranes Have a Common Structure and Are Fluid Cholesterol is an important component of animal cell membranes. Cholesterol is important in modulating membrane fluidity In-Text Art, Chapter 5, p. 84 (2) Concept 5.1 Biological Membranes Have a Common Structure and Are Fluid Membrane fluidity is influenced by: • Lipid composition—short, unsaturated chains increase fluidity • Temperature—fluidity decreases in colder conditions Concept 5.1 Biological Membranes Have a Common Structure and Are Fluid What are peripheral membrane proteins? - lack hydrophobic groups and are not embedded in the bilayer. What are integral membrane proteins? - least partly embedded in the phospholipid bilayer. In-Text Art, Chapter 5, p. 85 Concept 5.1 Biological Membranes Have a Common Structure and Are Fluid What are transmembrane proteins? - extend through the bilayer; they may have domains with different functions on the inner and outer sides of the membrane. Concept 5.1 Biological Membranes Have a Common Structure and Are Fluid Some membrane proteins can move within the phosopholipid bilayer; others are restricted. Figure 5.2 Rapid Diffusion of Membrane Proteins (Part 1) Figure 5.2 Rapid Diffusion of Membrane Proteins (Part 2) Figure 5.2 Rapid Diffusion of Membrane Proteins (Part 3) Concept 5.1 Biological Membranes Have a Common Structure and Are Fluid What are glycolipids? • carbohydrate covalently bonded to a lipid What are glycoproteins? • one or more oligosaccharides covalently bonded to a protein What is a proteoglycan? • protein with more and longer carbohydrates bonded to it Concept 5.1 Biological Membranes Have a Common Structure and Are Fluid Cells can adhere to one another through interactions between cell surface carbohydrates and proteins. Membranes, Hormones, and Receptors Concept 5.2 Passive Transport across Membranes Requires No Input of Energy What is selective permeability? biological membranes allow some substances, but not others, to pass What are two processes of transport across membranes? 1. Passive transport does not require metabolic energy. • A substance moves down its concentration gradient. Concept 5.2 Passive Transport across Membranes Requires No Input of Energy 2. Active transport does require input of metabolic energy. • A substance moves against its concentration gradient. Concept 5.2 Passive Transport across Membranes Requires No Input of Energy Passive transport can occur by: • Simple diffusion through the phospholipid bilayer • Facilitated diffusion through channel proteins or aided by carrier proteins Passive Transport Active Transport Concept 5.2 Passive Transport across Membranes Requires No Input of Energy Diffusion is the process of random movement toward equilibrium; a net movement from regions of greater concentration to regions of lesser concentration. Concept 5.2 Passive Transport across Membranes Requires No Input of Energy Speed of diffusion depends on three factors: • Diameter of the molecules—smaller molecules diffuse faster. • Temperature of the solution—higher temperatures lead to faster diffusion. • Concentration gradient—the greater the concentration gradient, the faster a substance will diffuse. Concept 5.2 Passive Transport across Membranes Requires No Input of Energy Some molecules cross the phospholipid bilayer by simple diffusion: • O2, CO2, and small, nonpolar, lipid-soluble molecules. Polar (hydrophilic) molecules do not pass through—they are not soluble in the hydrophobic interior of the membrane. • Amino acids, sugars, ions, water Concept 5.2 Passive Transport across Membranes Requires No Input of Energy What is Osmosis? - the diffusion of water across membranes through special channels. The higher the total solute concentration, the lower the concentration of water molecules. Concept 5.2 Passive Transport across Membranes Requires No Input of Energy What is the Osmotic pressure? - pressure that must be applied to a solution to prevent flow of water across a membrane by osmosis Π = cRT c = total solute concentration R = the gas constant T = absolute temperature Concept 5.2 Passive Transport across Membranes Requires No Input of Energy If a membrane allows water, but not solutes, to pass through, the net movement of water molecules will be toward the solution with the higher solute concentration and the lower concentration of water molecules. Concept 5.2 Passive Transport across Membranes Requires No Input of Energy When comparing two solutions separated by a membrane: • A hypertonic solution has a higher solute concentration. • Isotonic solutions have equal solute concentrations. • A hypotonic solution has a lower solute concentration. Figure 5.3 Osmosis Can Modify the Shapes of Cells Different Types of Osmotic Movement Concept 5.2 Passive Transport across Membranes Requires No Input of Energy What is turgor pressure? - the internal pressure against the cell wall—as it builds up, it prevents more water from entering. Concept 5.2 Passive Transport across Membranes Requires No Input of Energy Facilitated diffusion: What are channel proteins? - integral membrane proteins that form channels across the membrane through which some substances can pass. Substances can also bind to carrier proteins to speed up diffusion. Concept 5.2 Passive Transport across Membranes Requires No Input of Energy What are ion channels? - channel proteins that allow specific ions to pass through What are gated channels? - they open when a stimulus causes the protein to change shape. • Ligand-gated—the stimulus is a ligand, a chemical signal. • Voltage-gated—the stimulus is a change in electrical charge difference across the Figure 5.4 A Ligand-Gated Channel Protein Opens in Response to a Stimulus Concept 5.2 Passive Transport across Membranes Requires No Input of Energy Water crosses membranes at a faster rate than simple diffusion. It may “hitchhike” with ions such as Na+ as they pass through ion channels. Aquaporins are channels that allow large amounts of water to move along its concentration gradient. Figure 5.5 Aquaporins Increase Membrane Permeability to Water (Part 1) Figure 5.5 Aquaporins Increase Membrane Permeability to Water (Part 2) Figure 5.5 Aquaporins Increase Membrane Permeability to Water (Part 3) Concept 5.2 Passive Transport across Membranes Requires No Input of Energy Carrier proteins in the membrane facilitate diffusion by binding substances. Glucose transporters are carrier proteins in mammalian cells. Glucose molecules bind to the carrier protein and cause the protein to change shape—it releases glucose on the other side of the membrane. Figure 5.6 A Carrier Protein Facilitates Diffusion (Part 1) Concept 5.2 Passive Transport across Membranes Requires No Input of Energy Glucose is quickly broken down in the cell, so there is always a strong concentration gradient that favors glucose uptake. But the system can become saturated—when all of the carrier molecules are bound, the rate of diffusion reaches a maximum. Figure 5.6 A Carrier Protein Facilitates Diffusion (Part 2) Concept 5.3 Active Transport Moves Solutes against Their Concentration Gradients Cells maintain an internal environment with a different composition than the outside environment. This requires work—energy from ATP is needed to move substances against their concentration gradients (active transport). Specific carrier proteins move substances in only one direction, either into or out of the cell. Table 5.1 Concept 5.3 Active Transport Moves Solutes against Their Concentration Gradients What are two types of active transport? Primary active transport involves direct hydrolysis of ATP for energy. Secondary active transport uses the energy from an ion concentration gradient or an electrical gradient. The gradients are established by primary active transport. Concept 5.3 Active Transport Moves Solutes against Their Concentration Gradients What is the sodium–potassium (Na+–K+) pump? - an integral membrane protein that pumps Na+ out of a cell and K+ in. One molecule of ATP moves two K+ and three Na+ ions. Figure 5.7 Primary Active Transport: The Sodium–Potassium Pump Carrier Protein Concept 5.3 Active Transport Moves Solutes against Their Concentration Gradients Secondary active transport uses energy that is “regained” by letting ions move across the membrane with their concentration gradients. • Example: after the Na+–K+ pump establishes a concentration gradient of Na+, then passive diffusion of Na+ back into the cell can provide energy for glucose transport. One protein usually moves both the ion and the transported molecule across the membrane. Concept 5.4 Large Molecules Cross Membranes via Vesicles To take up or to secrete macromolecules, cells must use endocytosis and exocytosis. Concept 5.4 Large Molecules Cross Membranes via Vesicles What is exocytosis? - moves materials out of the cell in vesicles. The vesicle membrane fuses with the cell membrane and the contents are released into the environment. Exocytosis Concept 5.4 Large Molecules Cross Membranes via Vesicles What is endocytosis? - brings macromolecules and particles into eukaryotic cells. The cell membrane invaginates, or folds around the particle and forms a vesicle. The vesicle then separates from the membrane. Endocytosis Endocytosis and Exocytosis Figure 5.8 Endocytosis and Exocytosis Endocytosis and Exocytosis Concept 5.4 Large Molecules Cross Membranes via Vesicles Endocytosis depends on receptors—proteins that bind to specific molecules (ligands). The receptors are integral membrane proteins on the cell membrane. The resulting vesicle includes both the receptor and its ligand, plus other substances present near the site of invagination. Concept 5.4 Large Molecules Cross Membranes via Vesicles What is phagocytosis? - (“cellular eating”): a specialized cell engulfs a large particle or another cell • A food vesicle (phagosome) forms and usually fuses with a lysosome, where the contents are digested. What is pinocytosis? - (“cellular drinking”): vesicles are smaller and bring in fluids and dissolved substances Pinocytosis Concept 5.4 Large Molecules Cross Membranes via Vesicles Receptor endocytosis brings specific large molecules into a cell via specific receptors. This allows cells to control internal processes by controlling location and abundance of each type of receptor on the cell membrane. It also plays a role in cell signaling. Concept 5.5 The Membrane Plays a Key Role in a Cell’s Response to Environmental Signals What is cell signaling? - cells can process information from their environment Signals include physical stimuli, such as heat or light, and chemicals (ligands). The cell must have a receptor for the signal in order to respond. Following receptor activation by a signal, a signal transduction pathway is initiated—a sequence of events that lead to a cellular response. Concept 5.5 The Membrane Plays a Key Role in a Cell’s Response to Environmental Signals In a multicellular animal, cells are exposed to many chemical signals: • Autocrine signals affect the same cells that release them. • Paracrine signals diffuse to and affect nearby cells. • Juxtacrine signaling requires direct contact between the signaling and responding cell. • Hormones travel to distant cells. Figure 5.10 Chemical Signaling Concepts Signals & Calcium Concept 5.5 The Membrane Plays a Key Role in a Cell’s Response to Environmental Signals Only cells with the necessary receptors can respond to a signal—the target cell must be able to sense it and respond to it. A signal transduction pathway involves a signal, a receptor, and a response. Figure 5.11 Signal Transduction Concepts Concept 5.5 The Membrane Plays a Key Role in a Cell’s Response to Environmental Signals Signal transduction pathways often include allosteric regulation: • Protein shape changes as a result of a molecule binding at a site other than the active site (e.g., a ligand-gated channel). A signal transduction pathway may produce short or long term responses. Concept 5.5 The Membrane Plays a Key Role in a Cell’s Response to Environmental Signals Receptors can be classified by their location: • Intracellular receptors are located inside a cell. Their ligands are small or nonpolar and can diffuse across the membrane. • Membrane receptors located on the cell surface have large or polar ligands that cannot diffuse through the membrane. Concept 5.5 The Membrane Plays a Key Role in a Cell’s Response to Environmental Signals Membrane receptors: • A chemical ligand fits into a 3-D site on the receptor protein. • The receptor may have a catalytic domain on the cytoplasmic side. The ligand is an allosteric regulator—it exposes the active site on the catalytic domain. Figure 5.12 A Signal Binds to Its Receptor Concept 5.5 The Membrane Plays a Key Role in a Cell’s Response to Environmental Signals Ligand-receptor binding is noncovalent and reversible. Concept 5.5 The Membrane Plays a Key Role in a Cell’s Response to Environmental Signals Reversible binding is important because cells need to stop responding to a signal after the appropriate response has occurred. Inhibitors, or antagonists, can bind in place of the normal ligand. • Caffeine binds to receptors in the brain, preventing binding by the normal ligands. Concept 5.5 The Membrane Plays a Key Role in a Cell’s Response to Environmental Signals What are ion channel receptors? - ligand-gated ion channels; they change shape when a ligand binds. • Acetylcholine receptors on skeletal muscle cells bind acetylcholine to open the channel and allow Na+ to diffuse into the cell. Concept 5.5 The Membrane Plays a Key Role in a Cell’s Response to Environmental Signals Protein kinase receptors also change shape when a ligand binds. The new shape exposes or activates a cytoplasmic domain that has protein kinase activity—it modifies proteins by adding phosphate groups. (Not all protein kinases are receptors.) Figure 5.13 A Protein Kinase Receptor Protein Kinase Receptor Concept 5.5 The Membrane Plays a Key Role in a Cell’s Response to Environmental Signals G protein–linked receptors: ligand binding on the surface exposes a site on the cytoplasmic side that binds to a mobile membrane protein, a G protein The G protein is partially inserted in the lipid bilayer and partially exposed on the cytoplasmic surface. Concept 5.5 The Membrane Plays a Key Role in a Cell’s Response to Environmental Signals Many G proteins have three subunits and can bind three different molecules: • The receptor • GDP and GTP, used for energy transfer • An effector protein that causes an effect in the cell Concept 5.5 The Membrane Plays a Key Role in a Cell’s Response to Environmental Signals The activated G protein–linked receptor exchanges a GDP nucleotide bound to the G protein for a higher energy GTP. The activated G protein activates the effector protein, leading to signal amplification. Figure 5.14 A G Protein–Linked Receptor G Protein-Linked Receptor G Protein Transduction and Cancer Concept 5.6 Signal Transduction Allows the Cell to Respond to Its Environment Signal activation of a specific receptor leads to a cellular response, mediated by a signal transduction pathway. Signaling can initiate a cascade of protein interactions—the initial signal is amplified and distributed to cause different responses, ultimately leading to changes in cell function. Concept 5.6 Signal Transduction Allows the Cell to Respond to Its Environment There are many ways in which cells respond to environmental signals: • Opening of ion channels—changes the balance of ion concentrations between the outside and inside of the cell and results in change in the electrical potential across the membrane. Concept 5.6 Signal Transduction Allows the Cell to Respond to Its Environment • Alterations in gene expression—genes may be switched on (upregulated) or switched off (downregulated). This affects the abundance of proteins (often enzymes), thus changing cell function. • Alteration of enzyme activities—more rapid response than those involving change in gene expression. Concept 5.6 Signal Transduction Allows the Cell to Respond to Its Environment The same signal can lead to different responses in different types of cells. Example: Heart and digestive tract muscle cells respond differently to epinephrine because the signal transduction pathways stimulated are different in the two cell types. Concept 5.6 Signal Transduction Allows the Cell to Respond to Its Environment Often there is a small molecule intermediary, a “second messenger,” between the activated receptor and the cascade of responses that ensues. In the fight-or-flight response, epinephrine (adrenaline) activates the liver enzyme glycogen phosphorylase, which catalyzes breakdown of glycogen for quick energy. Concept 5.6 Signal Transduction Allows the Cell to Respond to Its Environment Researchers found that glycogen phosphorylase could be activated by membrane-bound epinephrine in broken cells, as long as all parts were present. They discovered that another molecule delivered the message from the “first messenger,” epinephrine, to the enzyme. Figure 5.15 The Discovery of a Second Messenger (Part 1) Figure 5.15 The Discovery of a Second Messenger (Part 2) Figure 5.15 The Discovery of a Second Messenger (Part 3) Concept 5.6 Signal Transduction Allows the Cell to Respond to Its Environment The second messenger was later discovered to be cyclic AMP (cAMP). Second messengers regulate target enzymes by binding to them noncovalently. They allow the cell to respond to a single membrane event with many events inside the cell—they distribute the signal. They amplify the signal by activating more than one enzyme target. Figure 5.16 The Formation of Cyclic AMP Concept 5.6 Signal Transduction Allows the Cell to Respond to Its Environment Signal transduction pathways involve multiple steps in which enzymes are either activated or inhibited by other enzymes. In liver cells, a signal cascade begins when epinephrine stimulates a G protein–mediated protein kinase pathway. Concept 5.6 Signal Transduction Allows the Cell to Respond to Its Environment cAMP is produced and activates protein kinase A, which phosphorylates two other enzymes, with opposite effects: • Inhibition—glycogen synthase is inactivated by phosphorylation, which prevents glucose storage. • Activation—phosphorylase kinase is phosphorylated and starts a cascade that results in the liberation of glucose molecules from glycogen. Figure 5.17 A Cascade of Reactions Leads to Altered Enzyme Activity (Part 1) Figure 5.17 A Cascade of Reactions Leads to Altered Enzyme Activity (Part 2) Concept 5.6 Signal Transduction Allows the Cell to Respond to Its Environment The original signal is amplified at every step in the cascade. Each molecule of epinephrine that arrives at the cell membrane ultimately results in 10,000 molecules of blood glucose. Concept 5.6 Signal Transduction Allows the Cell to Respond to Its Environment Signal transduction ends after the cell responds—enzymes convert each transducer back to its inactive precursor. The balance between the regulating enzymes and the signal enzymes determines the cell’s ultimate response. Signal Transduction Pathway Figure 5.18 Signal Transduction Regulatory Mechanisms Signal Transduction Regulatory Mechanism Concept 5.6 Signal Transduction Allows the Cell to Respond to Its Environment Cells can alter the balance of enzymes in two ways: • Synthesis or breakdown of the enzyme • Activation or inhibition of the enzymes by other molecules Answer to Opening Question Caffeine is a large, polar molecule that binds to receptors on nerve cells in the brain. Its structure is similar to adenosine, which binds to receptors after activity or stress and results in drowsiness. Caffeine binds to the same receptor, but does not activate it—the result is that the person remains alert. Figure 5.19 Caffeine and the Cell Membrane