DLA 4 Flashcards

1
Q

What is a planar lipid raft?

A

They are short-lived

They contain cholesterol, glycosphingolipids, and sphingomyelin

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2
Q

What are Caveolae?

A

Lipid rafts that form invaginations in the PM

it is long-lived and stabilized by caveolins

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3
Q

What is the function of lipid rafts?

A

They can facilitate signal transduction

viral infection

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4
Q

What if a membrane does not have any cholesterol?

A

FA composition controls fluidity

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5
Q

What are the high affinity transporters of glucose?

A

GLUT 1,3, and 4

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6
Q

What are the low affinity transporters of glucose?

A

GLUT 2 and 5

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7
Q

What makes up the GLUT transporters?

A

12 transmembrane alpha helices

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8
Q

What GLUT transporters have constant uptake of glucose even at low concentrations?

A

GLUT 1 and 3

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9
Q

GLUT-1 is found where?

A

RBC, BBB, and kidneys

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10
Q

GLUT-3 is found where?

A

The brain

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11
Q

Explain GLUT-1 deficiency

A

A rare metabolic encephalopathy that can be tested using RBC

symptoms:

microcephaly
epilepsy-like seizures

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12
Q

GLUT-2

A

can transport large amount of glucose

found in intestinal cells- release of mono into portal vein

liver- glucose uptake

pancreatic beta cells- measuring glucose levels in the blood

renal tubular cells- re-uptake of glucose

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13
Q

GLUT-4

A

Found in fat cells, skeletal cells, and heart

Insulin mobilizes GLUT-4 and allows for influx of glucose into the cell

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14
Q

Steps of GLUT-4 mobilization?

A
  1. insulin binds to receptor
  2. recruitment of glucose transporters to PM
  3. increased uptake of glucose
  4. decreased insulin = glucose transporters will leave PM
  5. form to endosome
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15
Q

GLUT-5

A

Low-affinity

prefers fructose but will transport glucose if in high levels

found in intestinal cells and seminal vesicles

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16
Q

What is primary active transport?

A

For each pumping process 1 ATP is needed to move a molecule against the gradient

17
Q

What is secondary active transport?

A

SCT is coupled with the Na/K ATPase

transports both sodium and another molecule

18
Q

What is a ABC transporter?

A

ATP binding cassette

19
Q

Why are ABC transporters used?

A

ABC transporters allow the active transport of
molecules from the cytosol to the extracellular space:
this process needs hydrolysis of ATP.

normally lipids

20
Q

Describe the CFTR?

A

it is a gated channel with a pore for Cl- ions

it will open and close with a stimulus

some ATP is cleaved, but still considered passive transports

21
Q

cystic fibrosis and CFTR deficiency?

A

Salty skin is a indicator of a CFTR deficiency of a newborn

other symptoms:

poor growth
lung infections
male infertility 
chronic pancreatitis 
steatorrhea
22
Q

What happens during a CFTR deficiency?

A

Cl- and Na+ are stuck in the sweat, but these ions normally flow back into the cells

23
Q

Test to determine cystic fibrosis?

A

Sweat test

measure the amount of NaCl in the sweat