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Transport across cell membranes

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Reminder Cell walls are non living, slightly elastic and permeable. Cell membrane (plasma) is semi-permeable. It is made of fats and lipids. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Transport across cell membranes


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Transport across cell membranes
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Reminder
  • Cell walls are non living, slightly elastic and
    permeable.
  • Cell membrane (plasma) is semi-permeable. It is
    made of fats and lipids. The fats are arranged
    hydrophilic head out. Embedded in the fluid
    layer are proteins some are tube like, some
    act as receptors, some actively pump molecules,
    some are structural.

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  • PASSIVE TRANSPORT

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Diffusion
  • Particles are always in motion. The tendency of
    particles is to move to fill up a space. In
    biology terms, diffusion is the net movement of
    molecules from an area of high concentration to
    an area of low concentration.

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  • The difference in concentration in the two areas
    is the concentration gradient. A large
    difference gives a steep gradient and fast
    diffusion.
  • No energy is used to move the molecules.

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  • Rate varies depending on
  • size of molecules (smaller faster)
  • temperature of liquid or gas (warmerfaster)
  • state being diffused (gas faster than liquid)
  • concentration of chemical

9
Facilitated Diffusion
  • Some proteins in cell membrane help the diffusion
    of certain chemicals across the membrane faster
    than others glucose is carried faster than many
    others. The transport proteins are specialized
    to the type of chemical they can carry.

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Osmosis
  • Net movement of water from hi to low
    concentration through a semi-permeable membrane.
    (only water!)
  • A weak solution is hypotonic, a strong solution
    is hypertonic and if the same they are isotonic.

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Osmoregulation
  • The control of water in cells is very important
    as water passes rapidly across cell membranes.

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  • In plants the vacuole acts as a fluid skeleton
    too little and the plant becomes floppy , too
    much and it becomes crisp.
  • Single celled organisms constantly have water
    flooding them so use a contractile vacuole to
    pump water out.
  • Freshwater fish can drown due to water flooding
    their cells so produce copious amounts of urine.
  • Saltwater fish either keep their bodies at the
    same saltiness as the sea or drink the seawater
    and extract salt.
  • Humans have water-resistant skin, so dont need
    to worry!

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Active transport
  • Movement against a concentration gradient from
    low to high. This process uses energy we can
    tell when energy is used if heat is given off, O2
    is used, CO2 is made or glucose is used. If
    cells have a large number of mitochondria then it
    is likely to have a high energy requirement.

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Endocytosis and exocytosis
  • Some cells can engulf large particles
    (endocytosis). If the particle is solid we call
    it phagocytosis and if liquid pinocytosis.
  • Exocytosis is
  • the reverse process
  • getting rid of waste
  • particles or transporting
  • materials out of the cell.

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Cell size
  • Cell size is important in diffusion the larger
    a cell is the more difficult it is to diffuse
    substances in and out. Cells normally grow until
    they double their size and then divide. To have
    efficient diffusion you need cells to have a high
    SA/Vol ratio. This is why cells divide the
    volume drops but the surface area increases so
    the ratio goes up.

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