BCH210H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 15: Facilitated Diffusion, Lipophilicity, Active Transport

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BCH210H1 Full Course Notes
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BCH210H1 Full Course Notes
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Brain break * co2 is a molecule that can rapidly cross the liposomal membrane * Cholesterol can enter the membrane, but it will stop inside it. Small, uncharged or lipophilic molecules passive diffusion. Integral membrane proteins passive diffusion of most molecules is too slow. Proteins display an affinity and potential specificity for transported species. Transport is saturable (ie. we hit a certain point where the speed of transport is maxed because all binding sites are occupied) Membrane transporters that facilitate diffusion (aka ion channel proteins) Found in all kingdoms of life and share properties of selectivity, speed and gating. Not a defined structure; loops of polypeptides that narrow the channel to accommodate k+ ions. Selectivity filter composed of tvgyg; not the side chains but rather the 4 backbone carbonyls and the thr side-chain hydroxyl that bind the k+ ions. The backbone sits right where the water molecules would surround the k+ ion.

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