Cell membranes are way more complicated than you think - Nazzy Pakpour

912,918 views ・ 2017-08-21

TED-Ed


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Cell membranes are structures of contradictions.
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These oily films are hundreds of times thinner than a strand of spider silk,
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yet strong enough to protect the delicate contents of life:
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the cell's watery cytoplasm, genetic material, organelles,
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and all the molecules it needs to survive.
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How does the membrane work, and where does that strength come from?
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First of all, it's tempting to think of a cell membrane
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like the tight skin of a balloon,
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but it's actually something much more complex.
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In reality, it's constantly in flux,
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shifting components back and forth to help the cell take in food,
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remove waste,
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let specific molecules in and out,
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communicate with other cells,
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gather information about the environment,
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and repair itself.
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The cell membrane gets this resilience, flexibility, and functionality
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by combining a variety of floating components
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in what biologists call a fluid mosaic.
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The primary component of the fluid mosaic
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is a simple molecule called a phospholipid.
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A phospholipid has a polar, electrically-charged head,
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which attracts water,
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and a non-polar tail, which repels it.
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They pair up tail-to-tail in a two layer sheet
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just five to ten nanometers thick that extends all around the cell.
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The heads point in towards the cytoplasm
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and out towards the watery fluid external to the cell
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with the lipid tails sandwiched in between.
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This bilayer, which at body temperature has the consistency of vegetable oil,
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is studded with other types of molecules,
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including proteins,
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carbohydrates,
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and cholesterol.
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Cholesterol keeps the membrane at the right fluidity.
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It also helps regulate communication between cells.
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Sometimes, cells talk to each other
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by releasing and capturing chemicals and proteins.
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The release of proteins is easy,
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but the capture of them is more complicated.
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That happens through a process called endocytosis
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in which sections of the membrane engulf substances
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and transport them into the cell as vesicles.
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Once the contents have been released,
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the vesicles are recycled and returned to the cell membrane.
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The most complex components of the fluid mosaic are proteins.
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One of their key jobs is to make sure
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that the right molecules get in and out of the cell.
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Non-polar molecules, like oxygen,
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carbon dioxide,
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and certain vitamins
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can cross the phospholipid bilayer easily.
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But polar and charged molecules can't make it through the fatty inner layer.
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Transmembrane proteins stretch across the bilayer to create channels
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that allow specific molecules through, like sodium and potassium ions.
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Peripheral proteins floating in the inner face of the bilayer
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help anchor the membrane to the cell's interior scaffolding.
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Other proteins in cell membranes can help fuse two different bilayers.
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That can work to our benefit, like when a sperm fertilizes an egg,
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but also harm us, as it does when a virus enters a cell.
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And some proteins move within the fluid mosaic,
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coming together to form complexes that carry out specific jobs.
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For instance, one complex might activate cells in our immune system,
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then move apart when the job is done.
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Cell membranes are also the site of an ongoing war
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between us and all the things that want to infect us.
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In fact, some of the most toxic substances we know of
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are membrane-breaching proteins made by infectious bacteria.
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These pore-forming toxins poke giant holes in our cell membranes,
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causing a cell's contents to leak out.
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Scientists are working on developing ways to defend against them,
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like using a nano-sponge that saves our cells
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by soaking up the membrane-damaging toxins.
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The fluid mosaic is what makes all the functions of life possible.
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Without a cell membrane, there could be no cells,
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and without cells, there would be no bacteria,
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no parasites,
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no fungi,
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no animals,
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and no us.
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