Membrane Protein Pumps

Similar documents
Chem Lecture 9 Pumps and Channels Part 1

ACTIVE TRANSPORT AND GLUCOSE TRANSPORT. (Chapter 14 and 15, pp and pp )

Advanced Higher Biology. Unit 1- Cells and Proteins 2c) Membrane Proteins

Membrane transport 1. Summary

Chapter 10. Thermodynamics of Transport. Thermodynamics of Transport, con t. BCH 4053 Summer 2001 Chapter 10 Lecture Notes. Slide 1.

CELL BIOLOGY - CLUTCH CH. 9 - TRANSPORT ACROSS MEMBRANES.

Main idea of this lecture:

TRANSPORT ACROSS MEMBRANE

Membranes 2: Transportation

Biochemistry. Biochemistry 7/11/ Bio-Energetics. 4.2) Transport of ions and small molecules across cell membranes

Active Transport * OpenStax. 1 Electrochemical Gradient

Lecture 3 13/11/2018

Biochemistry. Biochemistry 9/20/ Bio-Energetics. 4.2) Transport of ions and small molecules across cell membranes

(Na++ K +)-ATPase in artificial lipid vesicles: influence of the concentration of mono- and divalent cations on the pumping rate

MOLECULAR CELL BIOLOGY

لجنة الطب البشري رؤية تنير دروب تميزكم

Transporters and Membrane Motors Nov 15, 2007

b) What is the gradient at room temperature? Du = J/molK * 298 K * ln (1/1000) = kj/mol

Electrochemical Potential and the Thermodynamic Basis of Solute Transport Mechanisms

Transport of glucose across epithelial cells: a. Gluc/Na cotransport; b. Gluc transporter Alberts

Cells have an unequal distribution of charge across their membrane: more postiive charges on the outside; more negative charges on the inside.

Quantitative Electrophysiology

Quantitative Electrophysiology

Biochemistry Prof. S. Dasgupta Department of Chemistry. Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur. Lecture - 15 Nucleic Acids III

Membrane Physiology. Dr. Hiwa Shafiq Oct-18 1

CELLS NOT YOUR CELL PHONE HOMEOSTASIS: LESSON 5 OVERVIEW TEKS

CELL SIGNALLING and MEMBRANE TRANSPORT. Mark Louie D. Lopez Department of Biology College of Science Polytechnic University of the Philippines

MEMBRANE STRUCTURE. Lecture 9. Biology Department Concordia University. Dr. S. Azam BIOL 266/

Molecular Biology of the Cell

Part I => CARBS and LIPIDS. 1.5 MEMBRANE TRANSPORT 1.5a Passive Transport 1.5b Facilitated Transport 1.5c Active Transport

Bio 119 Solute Transport 7/11/2004 SOLUTE TRANSPORT. READING: BOM-10 Sec. 4.7 Membrane Transport Systems p. 71

Neurophysiology. Danil Hammoudi.MD

2.6 The Membrane Potential

2002NSC Human Physiology Semester Summary

Electrical Properties of the Membrane

Questions: Properties of excitable tissues Transport across cell membrane Resting potential Action potential Excitability change at excitation

Proportion of Arabidopsis genes in different functions. 5% of genome consists of transporters (>1000 genes)

Cellular Respiration. Anaerobic vs Aerobic

Chapter 3 Part 1! 10 th ed.: pp ! 11 th ed.: pp !! Cellular Transport Mechanisms! The Cell Cycle!

Chapter 3 Part 1! 10 th ed.: pp ! 11 th ed.: pp !! Cellular Transport Mechanisms! The Cell Cycle!

Chapter 7-3 Cells and Their Environment

Chapt. 12, Movement Across Membranes. Chapt. 12, Movement through lipid bilayer. Chapt. 12, Movement through lipid bilayer

Membrane Protein Channels

Muscle regulation and Actin Topics: Tropomyosin and Troponin, Actin Assembly, Actin-dependent Movement

Chapter 2. The Chemistry of Life

Dr. Ketki Assistant Professor Department of Biochemistry Heritage IMS, Varanasi

Introduction to Physiology II: Control of Cell Volume and Membrane Potential

Lectures by Kathleen Fitzpatrick

Biomedical Instrumentation

Membrane Potential Fox Chapter 6 pt 2

Metabolism Review. A. Top 10

6 Mechanotransduction. rotation

Biophysics I. DIFFUSION

Outline. Metabolism: Energy and Enzymes. Forms of Energy. Chapter 6

Lots of thanks for many reasons!

Cell membrane resistance and capacitance

Potassium channel gating and structure!

2. In regards to the fluid mosaic model, which of the following is TRUE?

Chapter Outline. The Living Cell. The Cell Theory. The Nature and Variety of Cells. Cell theory. Observing Cells: The Microscope

Ch. 3: Cells & Their Environment

Neurons and the membrane potential. N500 John Beggs 23 Aug, 2016

SECOND PUBLIC EXAMINATION. Honour School of Physics Part C: 4 Year Course. Honour School of Physics and Philosophy Part C C7: BIOLOGICAL PHYSICS

Computational Cell Biology

Basic Chemistry. Chemistry Review. Bio 250: Anatomy & Physiology

The Proton Motive Force. Overview. Compartmentalization 11/6/2015. Chapter 21 Stryer Short Course. ATP synthesis Shuttles

Title: Nutrient Movement Towards and Into Plant Roots Speaker: Bill Pan. online.wsu.edu

Biol2174 Cell Physiology in Health & Disease

Chapter 2 Cellular Homeostasis and Membrane Potential

Chapter 16. Cellular Movement: Motility and Contractility. Lectures by Kathleen Fitzpatrick Simon Fraser University Pearson Education, Inc.

The following question(s) were incorrectly answered.

Life of the Cell. Learning Objectives

Activity: Identifying forms of energy

The Chemical Level of Organization

(Be sure to clearly state the principles addressed in your discussion.)

Biochemical bases for energy transformations. Biochemical bases for energy transformations. Nutrition 202 Animal Energetics R. D.

Biology September 2015 Exam One FORM G KEY

Biology September 2015 Exam One FORM W KEY

BCH 4054 Spring 2001 Chapter 21 Lecture Notes

Plant Function. KEB no office hour on Monday 23 March. Chs 38, 39 (parts), March 2009 ECOL 182R UofA K. E. Bonine

Metabolism. AP Biology Chapter 8

Figure ) Letter E represents a nucleic acid building block known as a. Answer: nucleotide Diff: 3 Page Ref: 54

Basic Chemistry. Chapter 2 BIOL1000 Dr. Mohamad H. Termos

STEIN IN-TERM EXAM -- BIOLOGY FEBRUARY 12, PAGE 1 of 7

Chapter 7: Membrane Structure and Function

SHORT ANSWER. Write the word or phrase that best completes each statement or answers the question.

Neuroscience: Exploring the Brain

Ch. 2 BASIC CHEMISTRY. Copyright 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

- the flow of electrical charge from one point to the other is current.

PHOTOSYNTHESIS. Light Reaction Calvin Cycle

Student Questions and Answers November 19, 2002

REVIEW 3: METABOLISM UNIT RESPIRATION & PHOTOSYNTHESIS. A. Top 10 If you learned anything from this unit, you should have learned:

REVIEW 2: CELLS & CELL COMMUNICATION. A. Top 10 If you learned anything from this unit, you should have learned:

1- What are rod-shaped bacteria called? A. cocci B. bacilli C. spirilla D. halophiles

BIOCHEMISTRY. František Vácha. JKU, Linz.

Metabolism. Fermentation vs. Respiration. End products of fermentations are waste products and not fully.

Chapter 1. Topic: Overview of basic principles

Universality of sensory-response systems

20. Electron Transport and Oxidative Phosphorylation

Energy and Cells. Appendix 1. The two primary energy transformations in plants are photosynthesis and respiration.

Dynamical properties of the calcium pump of sarcoplasmic reticulum: a normal mode analysis. Russell Hanson BIOL 8804b April 29, 2004

Transcription:

Membrane Protein Pumps

Learning objectives You should be able to understand & discuss: Active transport-na + /K + ATPase ABC transporters Metabolite transport by lactose permease

1. Ion pumps: ATP-driven Ion-pumps are energy transducers in that they convert one form of free energy into another. Two types of ATP-driven pumps: (1) P-type ATPases and (2) the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters that undergo conformational changes on ATP binding & hydrolysis and cause a bound ion to be transported across the membrane.

2. Ion pumps: gradient driven A different mechanism of active transport used the gradient of one ion to drive the active transport of another. An example of such a secondary transporter is the E.coli lactose transporter. Many transporters of this class are present in the membranes of our cells. The expression of these transporters determines which cell metabolites a cell can import from the environment. Transporter expression is therefore a primary means of controlling metabolism.

Expression & metabolic activity e.g. glucose metabolism. Which tissues can make use of glucose is largely governed by the expression of different members of a family of homologous glucose transporters called GLUT1 through GLUT5 in different cell types. GLUT3 binds glucose tightly so these cells have first call on glucose when it is present at low concentrations.

Glucose transporters (GLUT)

General principles of membrane transport

Free energy stored in Concentration gradients Unequal distribution of molecules (concentration gradient) requires an input of energy Active Passive [C 2 ] [C 1 ]

Movement of charged ions across membranes

Free Energy & Transport (a) Free energy in transporting uncharged solute across a membrane (b) Singly charged solute to the side having the same charge. A transport process must be active when DG is positive, whereas it can be passive when DG is negative.

The Free Energy Stored in Concentration Gradient For an uncharged solute molecule: DG = RTln(c 2 /c 1 ) = 2.303RTlog 10 (c 2 /c 1 ) R is the gas constant (8.315x10-3 kj/mol) T is temperature in Kelvin Concentration on side 1 of the membrane c 1 Concentration on side 2 of the membrane c 2

The Free Energy Stored in Concentration Gradient For a charged solute molecule: DG = RTln(c 2 /c 1 ) + ZFDV = 2.303RTlog 10 (c 2 /c 1 ) + ZFDV where Z is the charge of the solute DV is the potential across the membrane F is the Faraday constant (96.5 kj/v/mol) ELECTROCHEMICAL POTENTIAL

P-type ATPases

Two families of membrane proteins use ATP hydrolysis to pump ions and molecules across membranes The extracellular fluid of animal cells has a salt concentration similar to seawater (ca 140 mm). However cells must maintain their intracellular salt concentrations (ca 14 mm). Most animal cells have high K + and low Na + relative to the external medium.

Na + -K + ATPase

Na + -K + ATPase These ionic gradients are generated by the Na + -K + ATPase. It transports 3 Na + out and 2 K + into the cell for each ATP hydrolysed. Free energy change = +36.9 kj mol -1 Hydrolysis of ATP = -50 kj mol -1

Na + -K + ATPase ATP hydrolysis provides the energy needed to pump Na + out of the cell and K + into the cell generating the gradients. Subsequent purification of other pumps reveals a large family (evolutionarily related) in bacteria, archaea, and eukaryotes including the Ca 2+ ATPase and the H + -K + ATPase.

Pump action simple in principle but more complex in detail

Calcium channel Sarcoplasmic Reticulum Calcium-Transporting ATPases (SERCA) 80% (1.0µM) (1.5mM) Calcium stored in SR

(E1: Ca 2+ bound state) Calcium pump structure SR Ca 2+ ATPase, or SERCA P-type ATPase forms phosphorylaspartate Backbone Carbonyl gps Ca 2+ N binds nucleotide; P accepts the phosphoryl group (Asp 351); A is the actuator domain Pumps calcium into the SR of muscle cells (1.5mM in SR compared to 1.0mM in cytoplasm) Important for muscle contraction

Calcium free form Ca 2+ E2: Calcium free state

Eversion Eversion Hydrolysis of phosphoryl aspartate Mechanism of P type ATPases (>70 in the human genome)

Digitalis inhibits the Na + -K + pump by blocking dephosphorylation of E 2 -P Foxglove (Digitalis purpurea) is the source of digitalis Digitoxigenin is used to treat congestive heart failure. It increases the force of muscle contraction K i = 10 nm

Mechanism of action

How inhibition of the sodium-potassium pump leads to stronger contraction of the heart Inhibition of the Na + -K + pump by digitalis leads to a higher level of Na + inside the cell. The reduced Na + gradient results in slower extrusion of calcium by the sodium-calcium exchanger. The increase in calcium enhances the ability of the cardiac muscle to contract.

ABC-transporters

ABC transporters - multidrug resistance The onset of MDR in cultured tumour cells (& presumably tumours in patients) was found to correlate with expression & activity of a membrane protein of 170 kd. This is an ATPdependant pump that extrudes a wide range of small molecules from the cells that express it. There are ABC transporters containing two transmembrane domains and two ATP-binding domains (cassettes) (thus termed ABC).

ABC transporters

Vibrio cholerae lipid transporter an ABC transporter Dimer of 62 kda chains; N transmembrane C ATP binding cassette P-Loop NTPase (>150 ABC transporter genes in the human genome)

ABC transporter mechanism Eukaryotic ABC transporters generally transport molecules out of the cell

Secondary transporters

Secondary transporters - Lactose permease Archetype secondary transporter The thermodynamically unfavourable flow of one species of ion or molecule up a concentration gradient is driven by the favourable flow of a different species down a concentration gradient.

Secondary transporters cotransporters

Lactose permease This symporter uses the H + gradient across the E.coli membrane (outside H + has higher concentration) generated by the oxidation of fuel molecules, to drive the uptake of lactose and other sugars against a concentration gradient.

Lactose permease Cell interior Side view Lactose Bottom view

[H + ] Lactose permease mechanism [H + ] Glu 269 is the likely proton acceptor Many features similar to ABC transporter (NO ATP!)