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Multiple Choice
Why do phospholipids form a bilayer in the plasma membrane?
A
Because their hydrophobic tails repel water and their hydrophilic heads attract water.
B
Because their hydrophilic tails attract water and their hydrophobic heads repel water.
C
Because they are attracted to the proteins embedded in the membrane.
D
Because they are rigid structures that provide support to the cell.
Verified step by step guidance
1
Understand the structure of a phospholipid: Phospholipids have a hydrophilic (water-attracting) head and two hydrophobic (water-repelling) tails.
Consider the environment of the plasma membrane: The plasma membrane is surrounded by aqueous environments both inside and outside the cell.
Analyze how phospholipids behave in water: The hydrophilic heads of phospholipids face the aqueous environments to interact with water, while the hydrophobic tails face away from water, towards each other.
Visualize the formation of the bilayer: Phospholipids arrange themselves into a bilayer with the hydrophilic heads facing outward and the hydrophobic tails facing inward, creating a stable structure.
Conclude why a bilayer forms: The bilayer formation minimizes the exposure of hydrophobic tails to water, while allowing the hydrophilic heads to interact with the aqueous environment, which is energetically favorable.