what i dont understand is when a phospholipid bilayer is penetrated by a water molecule in the outside of the cell and how it enters the cytosol
if the tails are hyrdrophobic why dont they act adversely when a water molecule penetrates the first layer and is inside where the hydrophobic tails are?
@nalgaface123456789 Lipid bilayers in biological conditions are much less ordered as shown here. Each lipid in reality is dancing like a crazy person with is acyl chains creating gaps between the lipids. This allows water to sneak through the gaps one at a time, which is a slow process if you want to transport large quantities of water. Once water is in one of the gaps, basically the dancing lipids kick it out towards the head groups, which could go through the layer or back where it came from.
I know your question is a year's old. If it is still not answered,remember the membrame is selectively permeable - Aquaporins (transmembrane protein channels embeded within the membrane) connect the cytoplasm to the extracellular fluid so water can flow ( by Osmosis of course) . It doesn't matter if the tails are hydrophobic, it has nothing to do with it. The polar layers are always hydrated, to keep you alive!
Imagine a layer of metal-sponge-metal. If you pour water on the surface it will not penetrate. Right? Now drill a few dozen holes and press fit pvc tubes fitting those holes. Now pour water. It will partially drip trough the holes onto whatever is underneath. But, the sponge between the metal layers will always stay dry
as I look at it slowly...i cant see the bilayer the hydrophobic and philic parts of the fatty acid arent clear enough and I get dizzy looking at it....it zooms in and out. Hope you teacher appreciated your hard work....but it isnt useful for students trying to understand phospholipid bilayers.
That's true, is not very useful as a study aid, I apologize. This video is complementary to another animation. I appreciate the feedback, thank you for all your comments.
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Johnathon394 1 year ago
what i dont understand is when a phospholipid bilayer is penetrated by a water molecule in the outside of the cell and how it enters the cytosol
if the tails are hyrdrophobic why dont they act adversely when a water molecule penetrates the first layer and is inside where the hydrophobic tails are?
wont the second layer turn upside down?
nalgaface123456789 2 years ago
Water enters the cell by channels called Aquaporins.
Tetramers with four identical subunits
Six membrane domains in each subunit
Each with a water pore
Predominantly expressed in cells that express high permeability to water (erythrocytes, kidney)
felipelicon 2 years ago
thanks for clarifying that but my question is stil unanswered
nalgaface123456789 2 years ago
The second layer wont turn upside down. The Cell membrane wont shift its shape.
felipelicon 2 years ago
oh ok
thanks for cleaaring that up
its because im taking ap bio and its pretty complicated for me
nalgaface123456789 2 years ago
@nalgaface123456789 Lipid bilayers in biological conditions are much less ordered as shown here. Each lipid in reality is dancing like a crazy person with is acyl chains creating gaps between the lipids. This allows water to sneak through the gaps one at a time, which is a slow process if you want to transport large quantities of water. Once water is in one of the gaps, basically the dancing lipids kick it out towards the head groups, which could go through the layer or back where it came from.
AbsoluteJake 1 year ago
Comment removed
MyStIcTrE3 5 months ago
Comment removed
MyStIcTrE3 5 months ago
@nalgaface123456789
I know your question is a year's old. If it is still not answered,remember the membrame is selectively permeable - Aquaporins (transmembrane protein channels embeded within the membrane) connect the cytoplasm to the extracellular fluid so water can flow ( by Osmosis of course) . It doesn't matter if the tails are hydrophobic, it has nothing to do with it. The polar layers are always hydrated, to keep you alive!
MyStIcTrE3 5 months ago
@MyStIcTrE3
Imagine a layer of metal-sponge-metal. If you pour water on the surface it will not penetrate. Right? Now drill a few dozen holes and press fit pvc tubes fitting those holes. Now pour water. It will partially drip trough the holes onto whatever is underneath. But, the sponge between the metal layers will always stay dry
MyStIcTrE3 5 months ago
awesome. glycolipid + phospholipid + sterol groups.
dro04yoo 2 years ago
The top layer is the Choline group, which is bounded to a phosphate.
CH2-CH2-N(CH3)3
The yellow part is the methyl radical CH3
felipelicon 3 years ago
is that a cholesterol layer ont top in yellow?
mazzc7 3 years ago
as I look at it slowly...i cant see the bilayer the hydrophobic and philic parts of the fatty acid arent clear enough and I get dizzy looking at it....it zooms in and out. Hope you teacher appreciated your hard work....but it isnt useful for students trying to understand phospholipid bilayers.
mazzc7 3 years ago
That's true, is not very useful as a study aid, I apologize. This video is complementary to another animation. I appreciate the feedback, thank you for all your comments.
felipelicon 3 years ago
fair enough.
mazzc7 3 years ago
why upload this?
mazzc7 3 years ago
I uploaded this so my microbiology instructor can see it.
felipelicon 3 years ago
what am i supposed to do with this??
sodr2 3 years ago
i know. what the heck
MissEmy07 3 years ago
This is a sample of a 3D model I've created of the phospholipid bilayer.
felipelicon 3 years ago
oh, okay
sodr2 3 years ago
This is a sample of a 3D model I've created of the phospholipid bilayer.
felipelicon 3 years ago