The Plasma Membrane: Cell Membranes Are Like Gates

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The Plasma Membrane

What if you needed to find a job in the factory? What could you do? If you do not have any manufacturing skills, and you are not
management material, you would probably be placed in an entry-level position.

Perhaps you'd be assigned to the warehouse. Here, you would be responsible for shipping and receiving. A factory
requires a constant supply of raw materials, as well as a way to send out the finished product. This department is
Cell
membranes usually located along an outside wall of the factory. Working here, you would be one of the factory's contacts with the
are like gates. outside world.

You might take a job as a receptionist and sit at a desk near the front door of the factory. A phone would allow you to contact
anyone else in the building. Also, all incoming and outgoing calls would go through you. As a receptionist, you may speak for the
factory and allow it to communicate with the outside messengers.

Maybe you wouldn't want to lift heavy crates in the warehouse or answer phones . Another possibility might be to take a job with the
security department. Security personnel are posted at every entrance to the building. You would be responsible for checking ID
cards and admitting only those individuals who belong in the factory.

Mail, reception, and security are separate departments in a real factory. But in a cell, these jobs are all performed by the plasma
membrane.

Plasma Membrane Structure

The plasma membrane consists of a combination of phospholipids and proteins. These proteins
are not fixed in any rigid pattern. Instead they float around in the membrane. This is called the
FLUID MOSAIC MODEL of the cell membrane. The key to understanding the function of the cell
membrane lies in the understanding of these specialized parts.

Phospholipids have a hydrophilic end that is attracted to water and a hydrophobic end that repels
water. When mixed with water, phospholipids line up in double layered spheres. These structures Plasma membrane phospholipid bilayer
are stable and accommodate the needs of both the hydrophilic and the hydrophobic ends of the
molecule. The hydrophilic ends are in contact with water, while the hydrophobic ends face each
other and do not touch the water.

Membrane Proteins
Floating in the phospholipid bilayer are many types of proteins. PERIPHERAL PROTEINS lie on the surface of the membrane. Other
proteins, called INTEGRAL PROTEINS, extend into and sometimes completely through the membrane. Generally, integral proteins fit
into three categories: marker proteins, transport proteins, and receptor proteins.

MARKER PROTEINS are like nametags that identify the cell to other cells.
Each organism has its own unique marker proteins on its membranes.
One of the functions of marker proteins is to enable a person's immune
system to distinguish its cells from those of invading cells.

TRANSPOR T PROTEINS
are
responsible for shipping and receiving. They move materials in
and out of theIntegral
cell. Some of them
and peripheral function
membrane as pores that
proteins allow
substances to diffuse through the membrane. Others act as pumps that
use energy to pull molecules across the membrane, a process
called as ACTIVE TRANSPORT.

RECEPTOR PROTEINS extend through the cell membrane. As the


Active transport requires the use of energy.
communication office of the cell, they allow the cell to interact
with other cells. The part of the receptor protein on the exterior of the cell surface binds to a molecule. This causes the portion of the
protein on the inside of the cell to change shape, triggering a reaction within the cell. The specificity of receptor proteins allow the cell
to respond to the outside environment in many different ways.

These three classes of proteins are the real workers of the plasma membrane. They allow the membrane to be a dynamic structure
that allows materials to be transported and messages to be communicated to the cell.

So it is evident that proteins do much of the work in a cell. But who makes the decisions?
The Nucleus

In a factory, the chief executive officer controls everything that happens. What would it be like to have this job in a cell factory?

You would have your own office (which would be nice) but you would also have many responsibilities.
You would need to keep track of all the blueprints kept in your office. And you would tell the workers
which products to build and when to build them.

The cell factory contains a large inventory of blueprints dating all the way to its founding. Some of
these blueprints are out of date, and some are for parts and products that are no longer made. Part of
your job would entail sorting through everything, finding the correct blueprints, copying them, and
Electron micrograph of the sending the copies out to the assembly line at the correct time.
nucleus.
When the factory gets too large, it is difficult to run properly; thus, another factory must be built. To prepare for this, you have to
provide the new factory with its own set of all the blueprints.

Sounds a bit daunting? Now you may have a better appreciation for what the nucleus does in the cell.

Nuclear Function

The NUCLEUS, often referred to as the headquarters of the cell, controls all cell activity by regulating what proteins are made. It is a
large ORGANELLE that is easily seen with a light microscope. The nuclear membrane contains the blueprints of the cell. The
information for the manufacture of proteins is encoded in a series of bases along the DNA found in the nucleus.

All cells contain much more DNA than they actually use. A small percentage of this DNA is active, and the rest of it is outdated (or
nonsense DNA) that the organism no longer uses. As a species evolves over time, mutations change the DNA. Just as outdated
blueprints in a factory are kept on file, outdated genetic information is never thrown out. The entire evolutionary history of an
organism is written in its DNA. The processes of transcription and translation (which will be discussed in more detail later) allow the
cell to decode this information to construct proteins.

When a cell has grown to a certain size it becomes less efficient. To increase its productivity, the cell divides into two new cells in a
process called mitosis. The mother cell must have two copies of its DNA to pass on to the daughter cells that are created. This
ensures that every new cell has a correct and complete set of DNA blueprints.

Nucleus Structure
The nucleus is composed of a nuclear membrane and nucleoplasm. The NUCLEAR MEMBRANE is a
double membrane that contains the nucleoplasm. The NUCLEOPLASM contains CHROMATIN, a
combination of DNA and proteins. Within the nucleoplasm, the NUCLEOLUS manufactures RIBOSOMES,
structures in which proteins are assembled.

But where does protein production occur?

DNA transcription into mRNA


(or "messenger RNA", a form of
RNA) occurs in the nucleus.

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