tuesday november 23, 2010 you need your notebooks today. we are beginning our chapter on the cell...

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Cells and Their Environment Section 1 Tuesday November 23, 2010 You need your notebooks today. We are beginning our chapter on the cell membrane. Turn a sheet of paper sideways. In the center of the sheet, draw a membrane like the one on the board. On the left, make a chart titled: The 4 Roles of a Cell Membrane. On the right, make a chart titled: The 4 Membrane Bound Proteins.

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  • Slide 1
  • Tuesday November 23, 2010 You need your notebooks today. We are beginning our chapter on the cell membrane. Turn a sheet of paper sideways. In the center of the sheet, draw a membrane like the one on the board. On the left, make a chart titled: The 4 Roles of a Cell Membrane. On the right, make a chart titled: The 4 Membrane Bound Proteins.
  • Slide 2
  • Progress Towards Objectives Review your Cells Learning Objectives. How are you progressing?
  • Slide 3
  • Homeostasis Discovery What are some conditions in the human body that need to be maintained so that we maintain our health? What are some of the reactions our body has when these internal conditions fall outside of optimal? sleep, energy, immune system, water, food hunger pains, yawning, feeling tired and sick
  • Slide 4
  • Objectives: Cell Transport/Homeostasis Unit To understand how particles such as water, nutrients, macromolecules and bacteria transport across cell membranes making them semi permeable and be able to evaluate passive and active methods of cell transport.
  • Slide 5
  • Objectives Cell Membrane Understand how the cell membrane is built and helps a cell maintain homeostasis. Identify the ways the cell membrane restricts the exchange of substances. Identify 4 membrane proteins. List the functions of membrane proteins. Vocabulary Phospholipid Lipid Bilayer
  • Slide 6
  • Cause & Affect When its cold outside, we shiver. Why? When its hot outside, what do we do? We sweat. Why? Sweating & shivering are just two examples of our bodies trying to maintain a regular body temperature. Who remembers what this process is, one of the properties of life, that causes us to maintain balance in a changing environment?
  • Slide 7
  • Inside our Bodies The process of any organism trying to maintain balanced, stable internal conditions in a changing environment is called homeostasis. Its natures balancing act it does because the world always changes. What about inside our bodies? Does our internal environment change at all? How? What about the concept of dehydration? What do you do to fix this? How do you know to do this? Do you not feel thirsty?
  • Slide 8
  • Homeostasis Being thirsty is a chemical solution to satisfying our bodys need for water. As our water levels change in our bodies we have to adjust these to be as healthy as possible. This is just one reaction that takes place in our bodies but all living things react to their environments. These reactions help organisms maintain homeostasis.
  • Slide 9
  • Homeostasis, continued Individual cells, as well as organisms, must maintain homeostasis in order to live too. One way that a cell maintains homeostasis is by controlling the movement of substances across the cell membrane. In our continued study of cells, we are going to focus on how cells maintain homeostasis by the properties of the cell membrane.
  • Slide 10
  • Slide 11
  • Homeostasis What are the four functions that the cell membrane performs to maintain homeostasis? 1.Regulates what goes in and out of the cell. Acting as a gate keeper 2.To provide structural support. Provides pressure against the internal environment 3.Recognizes foreign material. Uses feelers called receptors to identify good and bad stuff in the immediate area 4.Communicates and organizes with other cells. Uses the feelers and glycoproteins to organize with other cells into tissues forming the Extra Cellular Matrix (ECM)
  • Slide 12
  • Cell Membrane Construction A phospholipid is a specialized lipid made of a phosphate head and two fatty acid tails. It is a lipid that contains phosphorus and that is a structural component in cell membranes. The phosphate head is polar and is attracted to water. The head is water loving = HYDRO - PHILIC The fatty acid tails are nonpolar and are repelled by water. The tail is water hating = HYDRO - PHOBIC The cell membrane is made of phospholipids.
  • Slide 13
  • Phospholipid WATER REGION Hydrophilic Heads Hydrophobic Tails NON- WATER REGION Polar Heads are HYDROPHILIC They love water Made of phosphates Tails are HYDROPHOBIC They hate and are afraid of water. Made of fatty acids
  • Slide 14
  • Visual Concept: Cell Membrane Outside of Cell Inside of Cell
  • Slide 15
  • Cell Membranes, a.k.a. Lipid Bilayer Structure Because there is water inside and outside the cell, the phospholipids will naturally form a double layer called the lipid bilayer. The basic structure of a biological membrane, composed of two layers of phospholipids The nonpolar tails, repelled by water, make up the interior of the lipid bilayer. The polar heads are attracted to the water, so they point toward the surfaces of the lipid bilayer. One layer of polar heads faces the cytoplasm The other layer is in contact with the cells immediate surroundings outside.
  • Slide 16
  • Lipid Bilayer
  • Slide 17
  • Visual Concept: Lipid Bilayer
  • Slide 18
  • Lipid Bilayer: Selectively Permeable Barrier: Selectively Permeable Only certain substances can pass through the lipid bilayer. The phospholipids form a barrier through which only small, nonpolar substances can pass. This feature makes the membrane SELECTIVELY PERMIABLE, or allowing only SELECTED substances to cross into the cell. This is also called semi=permeable Ions and most polar molecules are repelled by the nonpolar interior of the lipid bilayer and therefore have to be ushered in other ways.
  • Slide 19
  • Polar Molecules, like water, are repelled by the polar heads of the phospholipid bilayer. Other non-polar molecules, like carbon dioxide, are not repelled and allowed to flow through the bilayer.
  • Slide 20
  • Membrane Proteins Homeostasis is also helped out by various proteins that can be found in the cell membrane. Some proteins face inside the cell, and some face outside. Other proteins may stretch across the lipid bilayer and face both inside and outside. Proteins are made of amino acids. Some amino acids are polar, and others are nonpolar. The attraction and repulsion of polar and non-polar parts of the protein to water help hold the protein in the membrane.
  • Slide 21
  • Membrane Proteins What are the 3 major types of membrane proteins? 1.Peripheral Proteins: these are buoyed to the surface of the membrane. 1.Usually are associated with integral type proteins. 2.Integral Proteins: these penetrate into the hydrophobic regions of the membrane 1.Cell surface markers: glycoproteins are proteins with attached sugar chains. These chains of sugars (remember polysaccharides and carbohydrates) act as markers to help identify themselves to other cells 2.Receptor proteins: these are the feelers that identify good and bad substances in the environment 3.Enzymes: catalyze reactions that happen on the inside of the cell 3.Transmembrane Proteins: these span from outside to inside the cell. 1.Transport & Channel Proteins: allow large and/or polar substances to pass through the membrane
  • Slide 22
  • Membrane Proteins: Examples. Can you describe the type of protein?
  • Slide 23
  • A B D G H Transmembrane protein C Hydrophilic Heads Hydrophobic Tails E F Based upon what you learned, identify each of the labeled structures in the illustration. You have 3 minutes.
  • Slide 24
  • The cell membrane isnt rigid. Fluid Mosaic Model It has the ability to be squeezed and move around. And the same proteins are embedded throughout this squishy membrane. This is called the Fluid Mosaic Model of the membrane.
  • Slide 25
  • Questions? Finish the notes handout & the directed reading from Friday. Complete the directed reading (book questions) from Friday. When done, check in with me. Due tomorrow. Once completed, construct your own model of the membrane.
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Build a Membrane Activity Go to your groups and gather your supplies. For the remainder of the period you will build a cell membrane! Check in with me when finished = 25pts lab Coloring Key Membrane = Yellow Transporter Protein = Blue Channel Protein = Red Tethered Protein = Purple Anchored Protein = Green Receptor Protein = Orange
  • Slide 28
  • Build a Membrane Directions 1.Color the parts (neatly) described on the board. 2.Cut out the phospholipid bilayer (page S2) along the solid lines. Cut all the way to the edges of the paper in the direction of the arrows. 3.Fold the phospholipid bilayer along the dotted lines and tape the edges together to form a fully enclosed rectangular box. 4.Cut out each protein (pages S3 and S4) along the solid black lines and fold along the dotted lines. 5.Form a 3-D shape by joining the protein sides and tops together and tape them in to place. Use the tabs to help you. 6.Tape the 3-D proteins into place along the edges of the phospholipid bilayer. 7.By staggering the membrane proteins back and forth along both long sides of the bilayer box, the whole model will stand up by itself on a table.
  • Slide 29
  • Summary One way that a cell maintains homeostasis is by controlling the movement of substances across the cell membrane. The lipid bilayer is selectively permeable to small, nonpolar substances. Proteins in the cell membrane include cell-surface markers, receptor proteins, enzymes, and transport proteins.
  • Slide 30
  • Group Discussion/Reflection Talk in your groups to answer the following questions. 1.Identify the 4 functions of the cell membrane that allows it to maintain homeostasis 2.If I said the cell membrane is like a gatekeeper what does that mean? 3.How does the membrane regulate things going in or out of the cell? What is that property called? 4.What are the 4 types of proteins within the cell membrane and describe the structure/function of each of them.
  • Slide 31
  • Group Discussion/Reflection Talk in your groups to answer the following questions. 1.Identify the 4 functions of the cell membrane that allows it to maintain homeostasis 2.If I said the cell membrane is like a gatekeeper what does that mean? 3.How does the membrane regulate things going in or out of the cell? What is that property called? 4.What are the 4 types of proteins within the cell membrane and describe the structure/function of each of them.
  • Slide 32