Membrane Transport
Membrane Transport
Membrane Transport
by exocytosis.
Allows structures surrounded by a membrane to change shape and move
- A vesicle is a small sac of membrane with a droplet of fluid inside.
Endocytosis
- To form a vesicle, a small region of a membrane is pulled from the rest of the membrane and
is pinched off.
- Proteins in the membrane carry out this process, using energy from ATP.
- The vesicle is formed on the inside of the plasma membrane, containing extracellular fluid.
- It contains material that was outside the cell, so this is a method of taking materials into the
cell.
- Vesicles taken in by endocytosis contain water and solutes from outside the cell but they also
often contain larger molecules needed by the cell that cannot pass across the plasma
membrane.
For example:
→ In the placenta, proteins from the mother’s blood, including antibodies, are absorbed into the
fetus by endocytosis.
→ Some cells take in large undigested food particles by endocytosis. This happens in unicellular
organisms including Amoeba and Paramecium.
→ Some types of white blood cells take in pathogens including bacteria and viruses by
endocytosis and then kill them, as part of the body’s response to infection.
Exocytosis
Either:
- Protein designed for extracellular use is synthesized by ribosomes on the rough endoplasmic
reticulum (rER) and accumulates inside the rER.
- Vesicles containing the proteins bud off the rER and carry them to the Golgi apparatus, which
processes the protein into its final form.
Materials move via vesicles from the internal cis face of the Golgi to the externally
oriented trans face
- While within the Golgi apparatus, materials may be structurally modified (e.g. truncated,
glycosylated, etc.)
- When this has been done, vesicles bud off the Golgi apparatus and move to the plasma
membrane, where the protein is secreted.
- The vesicle will fuse with the cell membrane and its materials will be expelled into the
extracellular fluid
Net movement of particles form an area of high concentration to low concentration (down a
concentration gradient) until a state of dynamic equilibrium is reached (even dispersal of particles).
- Passive process: The cell does not have to expend energy for diffusion to occur.
- Energy source: Diffusion occurs due to the kinetic energy possessed by the particles
Facilitated diffusion
Large, polar molecules and ions cannot be transported across the plasma membrane through simple
diffusion as they cannot diffuse between phospholipids
However, transmembrane channels and carrier proteins allow these particles to cross the plasma
membrane.
- This is facilitated diffusion: These membrane proteins help particles to pass through the
membrane, from a higher concentration to a lower concentration
Channel Proteins
- These channels are integral lipoproteins which contain a pore with a very narrow diameter.
- Channel proteins only move molecules along a concentration gradient (i.e. are not used in
active transport)
- Ion-selective: The diameter and chemical properties of the channel ensure that only one type
of particle passes through, for example sodium ions, or potassium ions, but not both.
- Cells control which types of channel are synthesized and placed in the plasma membrane,
controlling which substances diffuse in and out.
Carrier Proteins
- Integral glycoproteins which bind to a solute particle and undergo a conformational change to
transfer it across the membrane
- Solute-specific: Only bind a specific molecule (via an attachment similar to an enzyme-
substrate interaction)
- Used in active transport: May move molecules against concentration gradients in the presence
of ATP (i.e. are used in active transport)