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NOTES: 7.3-7.4 CELL TRANSPORT & HOMEOSTASIS
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Selectively permeable:
● property of biological membranes which allows some substances to pass more easily than others
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Transport proteins: ● membrane proteins that transport SPECIFIC molecules or ions across biological membranes
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GLUCOSE Binding Recovery Transport Dissociation
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Movement across the cell membrane can be:
1) PASSIVE cell does not have to spend energy substance moves from where it is MORE concentrated to where it is LESS concentrated. 2) ACTIVE cell “spends” energy to move a substance from where it is LESS concentrated to where it is MORE concentrated (“UPHILL”)
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Passive Transport: DIFFUSION
● movement of a substance from where it is conc. to where it is less conc. (“down a concentration gradient”)
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Passive Transport: FACILITATED DIFFUSION
● diffusion of solutes across a membrane, with the help of transport proteins (passive transport because it is movement down a concentration gradient; cell does not need to spend any energy)
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Passive Transport / Fac. Diffusion: OSMOSIS
● diffusion of WATER through a selectively permeable membrane; water moves DOWN its concentration gradient (which is to say opposite the solute concentration!)
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● OSMOSIS:(this is a type of facilitated diffusion…water moves through special channels in cell membrane called aquaporins)
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OUTSIDE THE CELL INSIDE THE CELL
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WATER MOVES FROM HYPO TO HYPERTONIC!!!
the direction of water movement can be described / predicted based on if the cell’s ENVIRONMENT is: ● ISOTONIC: equal solute concentration compared to inside a cell ● HYPERTONIC: greater solute concentration than inside a cell ● HYPOTONIC: lower solute concentration compared to inside a cell WATER MOVES FROM HYPO TO HYPERTONIC!!!
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In animal cells: ● in a HYPERTONIC environment, water exits the cell;
cells shrivel and usually die ● in a HYPOTONIC environment, water moves into cell, causing it to swell and possibly burst
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In cells with cell walls (i.e. plant cells):
● in a HYPERTONIC environment, water exits the cell; cells shrivel and usually die ● in a HYPOTONIC environment, water moves into cell, causing it to swell; cells become more TURGID.
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ACTIVE TRANSPORT: energy-requiring process; molecules are moved across the cell membrane AGAINST their concentration gradient (“uphill”)
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Active Transport: ● Molecular Transport ● Bulk Transport
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Active Transport: ● Molecular Transport -small molecules &
ions are moved across membranes by proteins that act like pumps
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BULK TRANSPORT: ENDOCYTOSIS & EXOCYTOSIS
● transport of large molecules (e.g. proteins and polysaccharides) into or out of the cell
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ENDOCYTOSIS EXOCYTOSIS
*importing large molecules by forming vesicles out of the cell membrane **vesicle forms in a small region of cell membrane ***used by cells to bring in larger, extracellular substances (e.g. proteins)
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ENDOCYTOSIS EXOCYTOSIS
*exporting large molecules by vesicles fusing w / the cell membrane **vesicle buds from ER or Golgi and migrates to cell membrane ***used by cells to export products (e.g. cells in pancreas secreting insulin)
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2 types of Endocytosis: 1) Phagocytosis: solid particles (“cell eating”) 2) Pinocytosis: fluid droplets (“cell drinking”)
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Phagocytosis
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Pinocytosis
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7.4: Homeostasis & Cells ● sometimes an organism can be a single cell ● unicellular organisms dominate life on Earth…they include: -prokaryotes: bacteria -eukaryotes: protists (amoeba, paramecium, Euglena) -eukaryotes: unicellular fungi (yeast)
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Unicellular Organisms:
● unicellular organisms must maintain homeostasis ● HOMEOSTASIS: relatively constant internal physical & chemical conditions ● to maintain homeostasis, unicellular organisms grow, respond to the environment, transform energy, and reproduce
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Multicellular Life ● the cells in a multicellular organism must work together to maintain homeostasis ● in a multicellular organism, cells become specialized so that different cell types play different roles
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CELL SPECIALIZATION: ● some cells are specialized to MOVE (i.e. muscle cells) ● some cells are specialized to RESPOND (i.e. nerve cells)
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CELL SPECIALIZATION: ● some cells are specialized to transport substances (i.e. red blood cells) ● some cells are specialized to fight off pathogens (i.e. white blood cells)
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LEVELS OF ORGANIZATION:
● CELLS…are organized into… ● TISSUES: group of similar cells performing the same function
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LEVELS OF ORGANIZATION:
● ORGAN: group of tissues working together -ex: stomach ● ORGAN SYSTEM: group of organs working together -ex: digestive system (stomach, intestines, pancreas, etc.)
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LEVELS OF ORGANIZATION:
● ORGANISM: collection of all of the above!...specialization and interdependence at all levels allows an organism to maintain homeostasis!
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CELLULAR COMMUNICATION:
● Cells communicate with one another by using chemical signals (i.e. hormones) ● in order to respond to a particular chemical signal, a cell must have the appropriate RECEPTOR to which the signaling molecule can bind
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CELLULAR COMMUNICATION:
● cells respond to chemical signals in a variety of ways: -muscle cell contracts -liver cell takes up & stores glucose from blood -skin cells divide to replace injured cells
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