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Lipids and Cell Membrane Structure

Lipids and Cell Membrane Structure. Lipids make up MOST of the cell membrane. Lipids are not soluble in water Lipids store large amounts of energy The monomers (smallest part of a lipid) are called fatty acids

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Lipids and Cell Membrane Structure

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  1. Lipids and Cell Membrane Structure

  2. Lipids make up MOST of the cell membrane • Lipids are not soluble in water • Lipids store large amounts of energy • The monomers (smallest part of a lipid) are called fatty acids • Fatty acids can combine to make complex lipids by a reaction called dehydration synthesis (aka condensation)

  3. Fatty Acids – unbranched carbon chain that makes up most lipids 2 parts: 1. Carboxyl Head • -COOH • Polar – attracted to water • Hydrophilic – “water loving” 2. Hydrocarbon Tail • H-C chain • Nonpolar – stays away from water • Hydrophobic – “water fearing”

  4. Types of Fatty Acids • Saturated • Each C always bonded to 4 other atoms • Molecule contains the max. # of H atoms • Unsaturated • Double/triple bonds between some C atoms • Less H atoms needed

  5. Phospholipids are lipids with 2 fatty acids attached to one glycerol. They have a polar and a non-polar end that align in the cell membrane forming a bi-layer

  6. Cell Membrane Structure • The cell membrane contains fats, proteins, and carbohydrates.

  7. 2 Kinds of cell membrane proteins • Integral Proteins • Proteins that penetrate completely through the lipid bilayer (inside) • Function to help transport different substances into and out of the cell. 2. Peripheral Proteins • Embedded into the bilayer • Located on the outside surface fluid mosaic model

  8. Cell Membrane Functions • It controls what enters and exits the cell. It is considered selectively permeable since it only lets certain molecules into and out of the cell • It maintains the cell shape • It connects each cell to other cells near it • It can allow movement of the cell because the parts can move around each other, called the fluid mosaic model fluid mosaic model

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