Transport across the membrane
The chemical structure of the cell membrane makes it remarkably flexible, the ideal boundary for rapidly growing and dividing cells. Yet the membrane is also a formidable barrier, allowing some dissolved substances, or solutes, to pass while blocking others. Lipid-soluble molecules and some small molecules can permeate the membrane, but the lipid bilayer effectively repels the many large, water-soluble molecules and electrically charged ions that the cell must import or export in order to live. Transport of these vital substances is carried out by certain classes of intrinsic proteins that form a variety of transport systems: some are open channels, which allow ions to diffuse directly into the cell; others are “facilitators,” which, through a little-understood chemical transformation, help solutes diffuse past the lipid screen; yet others are “pumps,” which force solutes through the membrane when they are not concentrated enough to diffuse spontaneously. Particles too large to be diffused or pumped are often swallowed or disgorged whole by an opening and closing of the membrane.
Behind this movement of solutes across the cell membrane is the principle of diffusion. According to this principle, a dissolved substance diffuses down a concentration gradient; that is, given no energy from an outside source, it moves from a place where its concentration is high to a place where its concentration is low. Diffusion continues down this gradually decreasing gradient until a state of equilibrium is reached, at which point there is an equal concentration in both places and an equal, random diffusion in both directions.
A solute at high concentration is at high free energy; that is, it is capable of doing more “work” (the work being that of diffusion) than a solute at low concentration. In performing the work of diffusion, the solute loses free energy, so that, when it reaches equilibrium at a lower concentration, it is unable to return spontaneously (under its own energy) to its former high concentration. However, by the addition of energy from an outside source (through the work of an ion pump, for example), the solute may be returned to its former concentration and state of high free energy. This “coupling” of work processes is, in effect, a transferal of free energy from the pump to the solute, which is then able to repeat the work of diffusion. (See above Coupled chemical reactions.)
For most substances of biological interest, the concentrations inside and outside the cell are different, creating concentration gradients down which the solutes spontaneously diffuse, provided they can permeate the lipid bilayer. Membrane channels and diffusion facilitators bring them through the membrane by passive transport; that is, the changes that the proteins undergo in order to facilitate diffusion are powered by the diffusing solutes themselves. For the healthy functioning of the cell, certain solutes must remain at different concentrations on each side of the membrane; if through diffusion they approach equilibrium, they must be pumped back up their gradients by the process of active transport. Those membrane proteins serving as pumps accomplish this by coupling the energy required for transport to the energy produced by cell metabolism or by the diffusion of other solutes.
Permeation
Permeation is the diffusion, through a barrier, of a substance in solution. The rates at which biologically important molecules cross the cell membrane through permeation vary over an enormous range. Proteins and sugar polymers do not permeate at all; in contrast, water and alcohols permeate most membranes in less than a second. This variation, caused by the lipid bilayer, gives the membrane its characteristic permeability. Permeability is measured as the rate at which a particular substance in solution crosses the membrane.
For all cell membranes that have been studied in the laboratory, permeability increases in parallel with the permeant’s ability to dissolve in organic solvents. The consistency of this parallel has led researchers to conclude that permeability is a function of the fatty acid interior of the lipid bilayer, rather than its phosphoryl exterior. This property of dissolving in organic solvents rather than water is given a unit of measure called the partition coefficient. The greater the solubility of a substance, the higher its partition coefficient, and the higher the partition coefficient, the higher the permeability of the membrane to that particular substance. For example, the water solubility of hydroxyl, carboxyl, and amino groups reduces their solubility in organic solvents and, hence, their partition coefficients. Cell membranes have been observed to have low permeability toward these groups. In contrast, lipid-soluble methyl residues and hydrocarbon rings, which have high partition coefficients, penetrate cell membranes more easily—a property useful in designing chemotherapeutic and pharmacological drugs.
For two molecules of the same partition coefficient, the one of greater molecular weight, or size, will in general cross the membrane more slowly. In fact, even molecules with very low partition coefficients can penetrate the membrane if they are small enough. Water, for example, is insoluble in organic solvents, yet it permeates cell membranes because of the small size of its molecules. The size selectivity of the lipid bilayer is a result of its being not a simple fluid, the molecules of which move around and past a diffusing molecule, but an organized matrix, a kind of fixed grate, composed of the fatty acid chains of the phospholipids through which the diffusing molecule must fit.
Many substances do not actually cross the cell membrane through permeation of the lipid bilayer. Some electrically charged ions, for example, are repelled by organic solvents and therefore cross cell membranes with great difficulty, if at all. In these cases special holes in the membrane, called channels, allow specific ions and small molecules to diffuse directly through the bilayer.