Term
What type of variation in phospholipid do mitochondrial membranes contain? |
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Definition
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Term
What do you call esters of long chain fatty acids (14 to 36 carbons), and long chain alcohols (14-36 carbons)? |
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Definition
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Term
Where are waxes found in the eye? |
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Definition
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Term
What do you call lipids derived from eisacanoic acids such as arachidonic acid? |
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Definition
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Term
What type of lipids have a sphingosine backbone rather than a glycerol backbone? |
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Definition
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Term
What is a common name for the glycolipid N-acetylmuramic acid? |
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Definition
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Term
In what class of lipids is a cerebroside? |
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Definition
glycolipid or glycosphingolipid |
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Term
A ceramide plus a phosphochline gives what? |
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Definition
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Term
If you replace the phosphocholine group of a sphingomyelin with a carbohydrate, what do you get? |
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Definition
glycolipid or a glycosphingolipid such as e.g. cerebroside or ganglioside |
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Term
What three types of lipids are found in all cell membranes? |
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Definition
1) cholesterol 2) glycolipids (remember these are derived from sphingomyelines with the phosphocholine replaced by a carbohydrate) 3) phospholipids (just your basic glyercerol backbone with a phosphate polar group and two fatty acid chains) |
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Term
Why would one find more phosphatidylcholine facing the extracellular aqueous environment and phosphatidylethanolamine facing the intracellular aqueous environment? |
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Definition
Phosphatidylcholine has a positively charged N with four bonds. For some unknown reason phospholipids with net positive charges tend to occur exteriorly. |
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Term
What makes unsaturated fatty acids in the cell membrane more flexible? |
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Definition
The fatty acids slid by one another more easily when double bonds are present. |
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Term
Is it true that cholesterol causes membrane rigidity under the narrow temperature range above and below 37 degrees celsius? |
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Definition
Interestingly no, it is not true. At lower temperatures outside the narrow temperature range, cholesterol actually increases membrane fluidity. This is in contrast to what we normally think of cholesterol, which provides rigidity to the cell membrane at temperatures greater than 37 degrees celsius. |
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Term
What type of proteins cross or extend into the lipid bilayer, touch both membrane lipids? |
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Definition
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Term
What type of proteins are only associated with one side of the phospholipid bilayer? |
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Definition
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Term
Which type of membrane proteins can be separated merely with the use of aqueous salts? |
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Definition
extrinsic proteins (makes sense because they only touch one side of the lipid bilayer) |
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Term
How would you separate intrinsic proteins from the lipid bilayer? |
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Definition
It takes a strong detergent like methyl octylglycoside since intrinsic proteins are touching both sides of the phospholipid bilayer. |
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Term
Is rhodopsin a type of intrinsic or extrinsic protein? |
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Definition
Rhodopsin is an intrinsic protein which one might expect since intrinsic proteins are involved in transduction of light |
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Term
What type of proteins are the glycocalyx components? |
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Definition
The glycocalyx components are extrinsic cell membrane proteins which one would expect since extrinsic cell membrane proteins have more passive roles such as structural roles, but extrinsic proteins like instrinsic proteins are involved in transduction signalling. Extrinsic proteins are also involved in cell movement. e.g. myosin and actin components |
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Term
What do you call the outer sugar covering of a cell? |
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Definition
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Term
Which type of carbohydrate components can also be found on the membranes of intracellular organelles? |
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Definition
glycolipids and glycoproteins, while carbohydrates are usually found on the extracellular surface of cell membranes |
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Term
Will deprivation of cervonic acid lead to reduced viscosity of photoreceptor membrane discs? |
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Definition
While higher concentration of cervonic acid (a polyunsaturated essential fatty acid)in the photoreceptor membranes is responsible for the increased viscosity of the photoreceptors, there seems to be a preservation mechanism of this by the body since deprivation of cervonic acid in animals showed no impaired fluidity of the photoreceptors discs. |
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Term
How does vitamin E work in the eye? |
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Definition
Binds free radicals in peroxides that would otherwise attack the double bonds in fatty acids and convert them into fragmented aldehydes. |
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Term
What is the cause of the cherry red spot on the Macula seen in Tay-Sach's disease? |
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Definition
the accumulation of a partially degraded ganglioside GM2 due to the lack of the enzyme hexosaminodase A which would normally break down the N-acetyl galactosamine. |
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Term
What is the function of vitamin A in the eye? |
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Definition
1) visual transduction 2) aids proper development in corneal epithelial and conjunctival tissues |
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