BIO 1140 Lecture Notes - Lecture 7: Prenylation, Fluorescence Microscope, Glycosylphosphatidylinositol

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Polar aas on the portions that find themselves on either side of the membrane and non-polar that face the membrane. Membrane transport: carriers, facilitated diffusion, transport, pumps and tertiary structures and how they interact with the membrane. A- peripheral protein covalently bound to the cytoskeleton. B- peripheral protein non-covalently bound to the cytoskeleton. C- proteins anchored to the membrane via lipid moieties. D- proteins embedded within both layers of the membrane. Covalent bonds are very strong and not easy to break; cannot have something dynamic (easy to adapt) in the peripheral cell must be easy to change. Integral, have to span the membrane and go across both phospholipid can go across and in and out of the membrane many times also transmembrane proteins. Peripheral: non-covalently bound, interacts with integral proteins, cytoskeleton, or the extra- cellular matrix components. Lipid, dependent on the outer or inner leaflet (layer), the anchor will be different.

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