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Cell Transport

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Cell Transport Taking a look at the plasma membrane – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cell Transport


1
Cell Transport
  • Taking a look at the plasma membrane

2
The Cell Membrane
  • His friends call him the plasma membrane
  • He is thin and flexible
  • He has two main functions
  • Protection protects the cell from the outside
    environment
  • Regulation controls what can enter and exit the
    cell
  • He is selective allows some things to pass
    through more easily than others
  • He is selectively permeable permeate is a fancy
    way to say pass through.

3
What is the Fluid-Mosaic Model?
  • Whats a mosaic?
  • What does it mean to be fluid?
  • The cell membrane is NOT a rigid structure with
    immovable components!
  • The cell membrane is fluid-like and flexible
  • Within the membrane, molecules can move around

4
What Is the Cell Membrane Made of?
5
The (Phospho-)Lipid Bilayer
  • LIPIDS Phospholipids make up the majority of the
    cell membrane
  • Hydrophilic heads (polar) are made of phosphates
    (Phospho)
  • Hydrophobic tails (nonpolar) made out of fatty
    acids (Lipid)
  • To protect the hydroPHOBIC
  • tails from water, they form a
  • bilayer which keeps the tails
  • inside and the water- loving
  • heads outside.

6
STEROLS
  • Cell membranes of eukaryotes contain sterols
    between the tails of phospholipids
  • CHOLESTEROL major membrane sterol in animals
  • Make the membrane more firm
  • Prevent the membrane from freezing at low
    temperatures

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PROTEINS
  • Protein molecules - bring materials into cell and
    receive signals from outside cell
  • Integral proteins embedded within the bilayer
  • receptor proteins detect signals and transmit
    them inside cell
  • transport proteins passage ways that allow
    certain substances to pass
  • cell markers carbohydrates attached to help
    cells identify or recognize other cells
  • Peripheral proteins lie only on one side of
    membrane (enzymes)

YouTube Membrane
9
Draw the Cell Membrane!
10
Your turn!
  • Use your notes and what youve learned so far to
    complete the matching exercise in your notes
  • Protein (only) B
  • Carbohydrate (only) D
  • Lipid Bilayer A
  • Phosphate Head F
  • Fatty Acid Tail G
  • Involved in Cell Recognition D
  • Carbohydrate attached to a lipid E
  • Helps move large material across the membrane B
  • Carbohydrate attached to a protein C
  • Outside cell H

11
Solutions
  • Molecules dissolved in a liquid SOLUTES
  • Liquid/fluid dissolving them SOLVENT
  • This makes a SOLUTION
  • In a salt solution, ______________ is the solute
    and _____________ is the solvent
  • In a sugar solution, sugar is the solute and
    water
  • is the solvent.


  • Dots solute

  • Space solvent

SALT
WATER
12
Concentration and Equilibrium
  • Solutions will spread out their dissolved
    molecules until they are equal throughout.
  • EQUILIBRIUM molecules are spread equally
  • CONCENTRATION of molecules in an area per
    unit volume.
  • CONCETRATION GRADIENT the difference in the
    concentration of molecules across a distance


?High concentration more solutes per
unit volume Low concentration less
solutes ? per unit volume
13
What happens with a barrier?(like a cell
membrane)
  • If solutions on either side of the barrier have
    the same concentration, they are at equilibrium.
  • At equilibrium, both the solvent and solute move
    back and forth across the barrier there is
    always movement.

14
Transport of Materials Across the Cell Barrier
  • Materials move across the plasma
  • membrane in two ways
  • Passive Transport
  • movement across the membrane
  • without using energy
  • Active Transport
  • movement across membrane
  • that requires energy

15
Types of Passive Transport 1. Diffusion -
simulation
  • Solutes move across a membrane from areas of high
    concentration (crowded) to low concentration
  • Diffusion random particle movements, so does
    not use energy.

Imagine warm air coming through an open window
16
Moving down the gradient requires no energy
17
Because cell membranes are selectively
permeable.
  • .concentration gradients can build up across a
    cell (like a dam in a lake)

Potential Energy
18
What affects the rate of diffusion?
  • Concentration of the solution
  • Temperature of the solution
  • Pressure also speeds up particle motion

19
Types of Passive Transport 2. Osmosis
  • the process by which water molecules diffuse
    across a cell membrane from an area of higher
    concentration to an area of lower concentration
  • Water molecules (fast and small) pass through the
    cells selectively permeable membrane
  • Solute molecules are too large to pass -- only
    the water diffuses until equilibrium is reached.

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21
  • Three conditions that control the direction of
    osmosis- In each of the following conditions we
    are comparing the solute concentration outside
    the cell to inside the cell.

22
HYPOTONICITY
  • the concentration of solute molecules outside the
    cell is lower than the concentration in the
    cytosol.
  • This will cause water to flow into the cell until
    equilibrium is reached.

23
HYPERTONICITY
  • the concentration of solute molecules outside the
    cell is higher than the concentration in the
    cytosol.
  • This will cause water to flow out of the cell
    until equilibrium
  • is reached.

24
ISOTONICITY
  • the concentration of solutes outside the and
    inside the cell are equal so water will flow in
    and out of the cell at equal rates.

25
How cells deal with osmosis
  • Many cells, especially unicellular fresh water
    organisms, must deal with living in extreme
    hypotonic environments.
  • -water continually rushes into the cell forcing
    it to constantly rid itself of excess water.
    (Paramecium are unicellular freshwater organisms
    with this problem.)
  • contractile vacuoles -organelles that remove
    excess water by collecting it and then
    contracting, pumping the water out of the cell.
    This action requires energy.
  • Multi-cellular organisms respond to hypotonic
    environments by pumping solutes out. This helps
    control the flow of water into the cell.

26
  • Plants in a hypotonic environment can stand
    upright.
  • water fills the cell pressing the membrane up
    against the cell wall which is strong enough to
    resist breaking.
  • The pressure water molecules exert against the
    cell wall is called turgor pressure.
  • In hypertonic environments water leaves the cell
    through osmosis, the cell membrane then shrinks
    away from the cell wall causing the plant to
    wilt. This process is called plasmolysis.

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28
  • Animal cells like red blood cells have no cell
    walls to stop them from expanding and when in a
    hypotonic environment will swell until they
    burst. The bursting of cells is called cytolysis.
  • VIDEO

29
Types of Passive Transport 3. Facilitated
Diffusion
  • Large molecules or those with a charge (not
    soluble in lipids) need the help of a protein to
    pass across a cell membrane
  • Proteins form a channel

and molecules move through the doorway. From
high to low concentration. Each channel is
specific to a particular type of
molecule Doesnt require energy gt passive
transport
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31
Each carrier protein is specific for a certain
molecule
  • As soon as the molecule binds to its carrier
    protein, the carrier protein changes shape
  • The change in shape shields the molecule from the
    hydrophobic interior of the lipid bi-layer
  • The molecule can then be delivered either into or
    out of the cell
  • Example- glucose is too large to diffuse across
    the membrane but essential for the cell
  • VIDEO -

32
Diffusion Through Ion Channels-
  • allow for the passage of ions through the cell
    membrane
  • Each ion channel is specific for one kind of ion
  • Some ion channels are always open
  • Some ion channels have gates that open and close
    as needed
  • They open and close in response to 3 different
    stimuli
  • Stretching of the cell membrane
  • Electrical signals
  • Chemicals in their environment

33
Active Transport
  • Movement AGAINST the concentration gradient
    requires energy (because it moves solutes from
    low to high concentrationwhere its already
    crowded)
  • Difference in solution concentrations
    concentration gradient
  • Three types of active
    transport

34
Active Transport1. Pump
  • Pump a protein PUSHES molecules across the
    membrane

Ex the Sodium and Potassium (Na/K) Pump.
YouTube Na/K Pump
35
Active Transport2. Endocytosis
  • Endocytosis (endoin) a pocket (vacuole) forms
    around a large molecule outside the cell and buds
    inward to release the material inside the cell.

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37
Active Transport3. Exocytosis
  • Exocytosis (exoout) a vacuole inside the cell
    fuses with the cell membrane and forces the
    material outside the cell.

38
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