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Cell membrane - A fluid mosaic |  | Cell membrane - A fluid mosaic: Encyclopedia II - Cell membrane - A fluid mosaic |  | The basic composition and structure of the plasma membrane is the same as that of the membranes that surround organelles and other subcellular compartments. The foundation is a phospholipid bilayer, and the membrane as a whole is often described as a fluid mosaic – a two-dimensional fluid of freely diffusing lipids, dotted or embedded with proteins, which may function as channels or transporters across the membrane, or as receptors. The model was first proposed by S.J. Singer (1971) as a lipid protein model and extended to include the fluid character in a pub ...
See also:Cell membrane, Cell membrane - A fluid mosaic, Cell membrane - Detailed structure, Cell membrane - Transport across membranes, Cell membrane - Passive transport, Cell membrane - Active transport |  | | Cell membrane, Cell membrane - A fluid mosaic, Cell membrane - Active transport, Cell membrane - Detailed structure, Cell membrane - Passive transport, Cell membrane - Transport across membranes |  | |
|  |  | Cell membrane: Encyclopedia II - Cell membrane - A fluid mosaic
Cell membrane - A fluid mosaic
The basic composition and structure of the plasma membrane is the same as that of the membranes that surround organelles and other subcellular compartments. The foundation is a phospholipid bilayer, and the membrane as a whole is often described as a fluid mosaic – a two-dimensional fluid of freely diffusing lipids, dotted or embedded with proteins, which may function as channels or transporters across the membrane, or as receptors. The model was first proposed by S.J. Singer (1971) as a lipid protein model and extended to include the fluid character in a publication with G.L. Nicolson in "Science" (1972).
Some of these proteins simply adhere to the membrane (extrinsic or peripheral proteins), whereas others might be said to reside within it or to span it (intrinsic proteins – more at integral membrane protein). Glycoproteins have carbohydrates attached to their extracellular domains. Cells may vary the variety and the relative amounts of different lipids to maintain the fluidity of their membranes despite changes in temperature. Cholesterol molecules (in case of eukaryotes) or hopanoids (in case of prokaryotes) in the bilayer assist in regulating fluidity.
Other related archivesATP, Active transport, Cholesterol, Lipid rafts, Passive transport, Synapses, animal, antiport, bilayer, biological cell, caveolae, cell, cell adhesion proteins, cell potential, cell wall, cytoskeleton, diffusion, electrochemical gradient, endocytosis, entropically, entropy, epithelial cells, exocytosis, gut, hopanoids, hydrophobic, integral membrane protein, lipophilic, molecules, nm, organelles, phospholipid, phospholipid bilayer, protein, pumps, receptor proteins, stoichiometrically, symport, transmission electron microscope, transport protein, vertebrate, vesicles
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "A fluid mosaic", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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