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Aim: How can we compare carrier mediated and vesicular transport?

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Presentation on theme: "Aim: How can we compare carrier mediated and vesicular transport?"— Presentation transcript:

1 Aim: How can we compare carrier mediated and vesicular transport?
DO NOW: Worksheet Test on Thursday

2 Share and Pair- Tonicity Problems

3 Carrier Mediated Transport
B- Endocytosis

4 Carrier-Mediated Transport
Carrier-mediated transport of ions and organic substrates Facilitated diffusion Active transport Characteristics Specificity: one transport protein, one set of substrates Saturation limits: rate depends on transport proteins, not substrate Regulation: cofactors such as hormones

5 Carrier-Mediated Transport
Cotransport Two substances move in the same direction at the same time Countertransport One substance moves in while another moves out

6 Carriers and Vesicles FIGURE 3–18 Facilitated Diffusion.

7 Carrier-Mediated Transport
Facilitated diffusion Passive Carrier proteins transport molecules too large to fit through channel proteins (glucose, amino acids): molecule binds to receptor site on carrier protein protein changes shape, molecules pass through receptor site is specific to certain molecules Membrane Transport: Facilitated Diffusion

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9 Sodium-potassium exchange pump
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10 Carrier-Mediated Transport
Active transport Active transport proteins: move substrates against concentration gradient require energy, such as ATP ion pumps move ions (Na+, K+, Ca2+, Mg2+) exchange pump countertransports two ions at the same time Sodium-potassium exchange pump sodium ions (Na+) out, potassium ions (K+) in 1 ATP moves 3 Na+ and 2 K+

11 Active Transport 1 2 3 4 1 3 Na+ expelled 3 Na+ ADP P 2 K+ imported K+
gradient Na+ Na+/K+ ATPase Extra cellular fluid Cytosol 2K+ ATP 2 3 4 Na+ gradient 3 Na+ Cytosol K+ gradient 1

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13 Carriers and Vesicles Vesicular Transport (or bulk transport)
Materials move into or out of cell in vesicles Endocytosis (endo- = inside) is active transport using ATP: receptor mediated pinocytosis phagocytosis Exocytosis (exo- = outside) Granules or droplets are released from the cell

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15 Endocytosis Receptor-mediated endocytosis:
Receptors (glycoproteins) bind target molecules (ligands) Coated vesicle (endosome) carries ligands and receptors into the cell.

16 Carriers and Vesicles Endocytosis Exocytosis Pinocytosis Phagocytosis
Endosomes “drink” extracellular fluid Phagocytosis Pseudopodia (psuedo- = false, pod- = foot) Engulf large objects in phagosomes Exocytosis Is the reverse of endocytosis

17 Endocytosis Figure 3–21 Receptor-Mediated Endocytosis.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings 17

18 Exocytosis 18

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21 Summary Distinguish carrier mediated facilitated diffusion and carrier mediated active transport. Distinguish endocytosis and exocytosis.

22 Carriers and Vesicles Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings 22

23 Carriers and Vesicles Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings 23

24 Carriers and Vesicles Figure 3–19 The Sodium–Potassium Exchange Pump


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