Thanks to this single carrier protein, the cell gets energy for heartbeat, thought, and movement. Without it, glucose would float uselessly outside—and the cell would starve. That’s the function: selective, efficient, life-giving transport across an otherwise impenetrable barrier.
A transport protein named GLUT1 notices. It’s a gatekeeper embedded in the membrane, shaped perfectly to recognize glucose. The molecule bumps into GLUT1’s binding site. Instantly, the protein shifts shape, swinging open an interior passage. Glucose slips through into the cell’s cytoplasm. GLUT1 snaps back to its original form, ready for the next molecule. function of a transport protein
A glucose molecule drifts outside a human cell, desperate to get inside. The cell needs fuel, but the molecule can’t cross the oily membrane alone—it’s like trying to swim through a wall of wax. Thanks to this single carrier protein, the cell