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Summary Lecture Notes Cell Membranes | CBI10806 | Wageningen University | 2025/26

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Week 3 lecture notes from Introduction to Cell Biology (CBI10806) at Wageningen University, focusing on membrane structure and function. Covers membrane composition (phospholipids, cholesterol, proteins), osmosis (isotonic/hypotonic/hypertonic solutions), selective permeability, and transport mechanisms across membranes. Essential for understanding how cells maintain compartmentalization and communicate with their environment - ideal for exam preparation and consolidating core concepts from lectures.

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Week 3: Membranes
 Action at the boundaries:
o Receiving informtaion
o Import and export of small molecules
o Capacity for movement and expansion
 Membranes allow compartmentalization, creates different
microenvironments
 Membranes physically separate reactions, but should also allow
communication between compartment
Membrane structure
 Osmosis: the presence or absence of cell walls
influences how cells respond to osmotic
fluctuations in their environment
 Isotonic solutions:
o When two environments are isotonic, the total molar
concentration of dissolved solutes is the same in both of them
o When cells are in isotonic solution, movement of water out the
cell is exactly balanced by movement of water into cell.
 Hypotonic solutions:
o Hypotonic comes form the Greek “hypo” meaning under, and
tonos meaning stretching. In a hypotonic solution the total molar
concentration of all dissolved solute particlews is less than that of
another solution or less than that of a cell
o If concentrations of dissolved solutes are less outside the cell
than inside, the concentration of water outside is correspondingly
greater. When a cell is exposed to such conditions, there is net
water movement onto the cell (they can burst without a cell wall
(lysis) or turgor)
 Hypertonic solutions:
o In a hypertonic solution the total molar concentration of all
dissolved solute particles is greater than that of another solution,
or greater than the concentration in a cell
o If concentrations of dissolved solutes are greater outside the cell,
the concentration of water outside is correspongingly lower. As a
result water inside the cell will flow outwards to attain
equilibrium, causing the cell to shrink (plant cell = plasmolysis)
 Membranes are amphipathic
o Membranes mostly consist of phospholipids, molecules with a
hydrophilic and hydrophobic end
o A typical phospholipid has a polar, hydrophilic head group, and
two hydrophobic fatty acid tails
 Membranes also contain other lipids
o The exact groups differ among membrane lipids, but all are
amphipathic

, o Chemical properties of these different lipids are diverse, as are
the membranes that carry them
 Behavior of different molecules in water
o Hydrophilic molecules attract water, while hydrophobic molecules
tend to avoid water
 Lipids naturally organize into bilayers and compartments
o Phospholipids organize such that the hydrophobic tails stick
together, and polar head groups face the water phase
o Energy minimization leads to the formation of spherical
compartments
 Chemical composition determines membrane properties
o Cholesterol is structurally more rigid than phospholipids,
and tends to create stiffer membrane domains
 The cell can control the composition of the membrane,
enzymes such as scramblase and flippase can help generate
uniform or asymmetric bilayers
 Both layers of the phospholipid bilayers can have different
composition, the different properties of head groups can give
both sides of the membrane unique properties
 Membranes have and orientation (picture) 
 Membranes have a high protein concentration
 They contain various different integral proteins, they can be inserted
in the membrane in different ways
o In addition to
transmembrane
helices, proteins
can be inserted in
the membrane
through lipid
modification or by
binding to a
membrane protein
 Hydrophobic and
amphipathic helices
o A transmembrane helix is usually hydrophobic, as it is surrounded
by the phospholipid tail groups.
o In some proteins, amphipathic helices allow making a hydrophilic
pore
Transport across membranes
 Membranes have limited, selective permeability:
o Small, nonpolar molecules like O2, CO2, N2, steroid and
hormones, get true easily
o Small, uncharged polar molecules like H2O, ethanol and glycerol
can get true but not a lot

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Chapter 11, 12, 14
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