How high levels of cholesterol affect the cell membrane at certain temperatures?

Biology

What are Factors that Increase or Affect cell Membrane Fluidity?

All cells have cell membranes that form as barriers between the outside extracellular side and the inside of the cell. Cell membranes are fluid, which means they are not always in the same shape. In this lesson, we explain what factors affect or increase the fluidity of the plasma membrane or phospholipid bilayer.

How high levels of cholesterol affect the cell membrane at certain temperatures?

Cell Membrane – Factors that affect cell membrane fluidity – Copyright Moosmosis

What increases membrane fluidity?

In general, shorter tail lengths of phospholipids, more unsaturated phospholipids, and less cholesterol in the cell membrane increases membrane fluidity. 

Shorter Tail Lengths of Phospholipids

  1. If the length of the phospholipids decreased, then individually, other molecules within the cell membrane, such as transmembrane proteins, can move around more easily inside.

Think of a supermarket aisle. Imagine Person A and Person B. Person A is blocking the aisle path with his standing body, but Person B is blocking the aisle’s width with his body and shopping cart. It is harder to maneuver past Person B than Person A. This is the same idea with phospholipids. A phospholipid that is covering the “aisle” with its longer tail length decreases the overall fluidity or movement of other molecules.

How high levels of cholesterol affect the cell membrane at certain temperatures?

The yellow portion of this diagram indicates the tail ends of a phospholipid. The longer the tails are, the less fluid the cell membrane is. Image Credit: Wikipedia Commons

More Double Bonds or Unsaturated Fat:

The more phospholipids with double bonds, the more fluid the cell membrane is. This is because the double bond provides a kink within a monolayer. This prevents all of the phospholipids from packing together really closely and restricting fluidity of the membrane.

–Cold Environments: More double bonds= Better in Cold Environments

Animals living in freezing temperatures tend to have more unsaturated fat and double-bonded phospholipids in their bodies. When the environment is so cold, the cell membrane can freeze and stop moving, and that is bad. The individual phospholipids, in other words, would pack together so closely and would be more susceptible to “freezing.” Thus, animals adapted to these frigid environments have more double-bonded phospholipids in their cell membranes, due to the double bonds making kinks and spacing out the individual phospholipids from freezing together so closely.

Does cholesterol increase membrane fluidity?

Cholesterol is a rigid molecule that can both decrease and increase membrane fluidity depending on the temperature of the membrane. Temperature can affect the fluidity of a membrane. For example, when the temperature is high, more cholesterol decreases the fluidity of membrane. However, when the temperature is low, cholesterol increases membrane fluidity. We explain the details right below.

  1. Less Cholesterol: Heads up! This will depend on temperature. More cholesterol in the cell membrane causes the membrane to become more rigid and less permeable to other molecules or ions in high temperatures. However, more cholesterol increases fluidity in low temperatures. Why? In higher temperatures, phospholipids and other cell membrane molecules are already moving wildly (See Section 5: Higher Temperatures). Cholesterol itself is a chunky lad, so its bulky size will restrict the molecule movement within the membrane more. Thus, in high temperatures, more cholesterol decreases fluidity. However, in low temperatures, this is the opposite case. Imagine in cooler temperatures, the molecules are freezing and pack closer together and thus move less. With the presence of cholesterol, like double bonds and unsaturated fat, the tight packing is inhibited more.

How high levels of cholesterol affect the cell membrane at certain temperatures?
Cholesterols, shown as pink molecules in this diagram, take up large spaces in the cell membrane and thus reduce cell membrane fluidity in high temperatures. Credit: Wikimedia Commons

Less Packed Together:

This is correlated with the double bonds idea. If the molecules, proteins, and individual phospholipids are packed together so closely, this restricts internal molecule movement within the membrane.

Higher Temperatures:

Remember gas molecules? When the room gets hotter, gas molecules tend to ricochet off things faster. This is the same concept with the cell membrane. Higher temperatures cause an increase of fluidity in the cell membrane.

Summary of Cell Membrane Fluidity and Factors That Affect Cell Membrane Fluidity

Here is a summarized table of the factors that affect cell membrane fluidity:

Increase Fluidity Decrease Fluidity
Phospholipids with Shorter Tail Lengths Phospholipids with Longer Tail Lengths
More Double Bonds (Unsaturated) Fewer Double Bonds
Less Cholesterol More Cholesterol (generally in high temperatures)
Less Packed Together Closer Together/ More Packed together
High Temperature Low Temperature
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Cell Membrane Fluidity vs. Flexibility

What is the difference between fluidity and flexibility in terms of biology and cell membranes?

Cell membranes are usually more fluid than flexible. Fluid means that the embedded proteins or carbohydrates attached to the cell membrane have the ability to move around within the membrane. This does not necessarily imply that the cell membrane is flexible. Fluid does not mean flexible. If the cell membrane was flexible, its lipid bilayers would be able to bend easily; however, that is not the case.

For example, cell membranes often contain cholesterol, a hydrophobic molecule that contains a polar head and two non-polar tails. Cholesterol does have the potential to move laterally within a monolayer, but cholesterol is rigid and does not allow the monolayer to be bent easily. Thus, this reinforces the idea that the cell membrane is fluid but not necessarily flexible.

What is the importance of membrane fluidity?

Cell membrane fluidity is important for several important reasons. First, cell membrane fluidity is vital to membrane function and must be regulated and maintained to allow membrane proteins and lipids to diffuse through the bilayer. These proteins and lipids can enter or exit the cell membrane depending on the components of the cell membrane and are essential for synthesis of other nutrient molecules and pathways of the cell. Cell membrane fluidity is also important and maintained because it is vital to the fusion of membranes together and also allows membrane distribution to be split evenly during cytokinesis and cell division. When the cell membrane is too rigid and not fluid, this decreased membrane fluidity can negatively impact transport along the cell membrane and also break under the pressure of the body, such as high blood pressure in arteries. When the cell membrane is too fluid, this increased membrane fluidity can also negatively impact the cell. The cell would be more prone to breaking as well, due to the instability of the cell membrane. The cell won’t keep its shape properly! Therefore, cell membrane fluidity is very important to the homeostasis of the cell and our bodies’ health.

Test your knowledge on <Factors that Affect Membrane Fluidity>.

Questions:

Which of the following factors would tend to increase membrane fluidity?

A. A greater proportion of unsaturated phospholipids

B. A greater proportion of saturated phospholipids

C. A lower temperature

D. A relatively high protein content in the membrane

Answers:

Answer: The answer is A. A greater proportion of unsaturated phospholipids. A greater proportion of unsaturated phospholipids would tend to increase membrane fluidity because unsaturated phospholipids create more space and kinks inside the mosaic model cell membrane. When there are more kinks and space, the unsaturated phospholipids prevent the cell membrane from packing too closely together.

Questions

True or False

  1. Increasing the length of phospholipid tails inside the cell membrane increases fluidity.
  2. Decreasing the number of saturated fat inside the cell membrane increases fluidity.
  3. It is more ideal for animals, living in the Arctic regions, to have more cholesterol in the cell membranes. to increase membrane fluidity.

Answers:

True or False

  1. False
  2. True *Tricky! Saturated fat contains single bonds, which would allow phospholipids to pack together too closely. This would restrict cell membrane fluidity. Thus, by decreasing the number of single bonds or making the membrane less packed together, the fluidity increases.
  3. True ^ See our section above on the effects of temperatures on cell membrane fluidity

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How high levels of cholesterol affect the cell membrane at certain temperatures?
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How does high cholesterol affect the cell membrane?

Cholesterol modulates the bilayer structure of biological membranes in multiple ways. It changes the fluidity, thickness, compressibility, water penetration and intrinsic curvature of lipid bilayers.

How does cholesterol affect temperature?

Cholesterol gradually increases the temperature at which the Lα to Lo phase transition occurs. At very high cholesterol concentrations, the liquid-ordered phase transforms into a gel phase (LII) when the temperature is decreased below Tm.

How high levels of cholesterol affect the cell membrane at certain temperatures choose 1 answer?

34: Which of the following best describes how high levels of cholesterol affect the cell membrane at certain temperatures? At high temperatures, high amounts of cholesterol decrease the rigidity of the cell membrane.

How cholesterol affects the membrane fluidity in different temperatures?

Cholesterol acts as a bidirectional regulator of membrane fluidity because at high temperatures, it stabilizes the membrane and raises its melting point, whereas at low temperatures it intercalates between the phospholipids and prevents them from clustering together and stiffening.