Hey guys,
We learned that lipids in the plasma membrane are hydrophobic.
I thought this might have meant that they were neutral to water, but apparently it can be repelled by as well.
What I dont get is how something is repelled by water?
Im imagining a hydrocarbon chain. No real polarity. Won't the hydrocarbon and water just ignore each other?
Many thanks,
Corey
Additionally,
Does active transport always require that there be a higher or equal concentration of the transported substance on the side of the cell being transported to. What if a nonpolar and large substance needs to cross the plasma membrane, but it is in higher concentration on the outside of the cell? Is this passive?
-Does the DNA create membrane proteins and cholesterol? How are they formed?
-If an amphipathic molecule has two parts with different polarities, does this mean that any hydrocarbon chain with only one functional group is amphipathic?
Sorry for the bombardment, my teacher was sick this week

My research says that a peripheral protein is that which doesnt enter the hydrophic element of the bi-layer.
However, when I google a peripheral protein, I get images like the one attached.
This seems to clearly penetrate the lipids to me.
Would the peripheral protein look more like this? (second attachment)
Mod edit: I've merged your posts into one. Please use the 'modify' button to edit your post instead of posting in succession
-owlbird83