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Molecular (cell) transport
Material Exchange and Osmosis
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Material exchange Cell transport: movement of particles across membrane Takes place because cells are trying to maintain homeostasis
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Exchanged Materials What materials are exchanged?
WATER – MOST IMPORTANT Oxygen, Carbon Dioxide Ions – Na+, Mg+, Ca+, H+, Cl-, K+ Hormones (to transmit messages) Nutrients enter (sugars & amino acids) Wastes must exit (Ammonium)
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Cell Membrane Membrane composed of a Phospholipid bilayer with proteins & carbohydrates interspersed Lipids & proteins cause membrane to be fluid, not rigid
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The fluid mosaic model Fluid = all the parts move around
Mosaic = made of many different parts
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Components of cell membrane
Lipid: Main component of cell membrane
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Carbohydrates (Sugars)
Act as ID tags Attached to phospholipids and proteins
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Membrane Proteins Signaling Receptors – receiving signals
Transport – move molecules across the membrane Channels – act as doorways Glycoproteins – act as ID tags Enzymes - biological catalysts Attachment - sticks to other cells
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Cell membrane: Phospholipid bilayer
Phosphate heads: polar, hydrophilic Fatty acid tails: nonpolar, hydrophobic Heads arrange themselves on the outside & tails arrange themselves on the inside
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Cell membrane as a barrier
Causes membrane to be Selectively permeable: only certain molecules are allowed to pass through Small, nonpolar molecules like nitrogen & oxygen gas pass through easily. Ions (like H+ and Ca2+) are repelled by nonpolar tail and cannot cross membrane Nonpolar O2 Larger ions Polar molecules You shall not pass
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2 types of cell transport
Passive transport Active transport
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Passive transport Molecules move across the cell membrane from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration Does not require cells to expend energy Three types: Diffusion Facilitated Diffusion Osmosis
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Diffusion The movement of molecules from an area of HIGHER concentration to an area of LOWER concentration until it reaches EQUILIBRIUM Molecules move down a concentration gradient (from high to low) Concentration: amount of molecules in a given area Concentration gradient: difference in the amount of molecules in a given area
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Facilitated diffusion
Movement of small molecules across a membrane with the help of proteins Channel Proteins Carrier Proteins
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OSMOSIS Diffusion of water molecules
Water does this to balance relative concentration of molecules Therefore depends on solutions on both sides of membrane Cell membranes are completely permeable to water with the help of aquaporins
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Direction of osmosis is due to the concentration of the solutions
Tonicity Direction of osmosis is due to the concentration of the solutions Amount of solutes = tonicity
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Isotonic Isotonic Solution: concentration of solute inside and outside the cell are equal No NET movement of water
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hypertonic Hypertonic Solution: concentration of solute outside the cell is higher than concentration inside the cell. HYPER = MORE STUFF Water will flow out of cell
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hypotonic Hypotonic Solution: concentration of solute outside the cell is lower than the concentration in the cytoplasm. HYPO = NO STUFF Water will flow into cell “In Hypo, cell will be Hippo”
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Isotonic: Cell will retain its normal shape!
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Hypertonic: Cell will SHRINK!
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Hypotonic: Cell will SWELL!
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Movement of Materials Through the Cell Membrane
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Active Transport Molecules move across the membrane from an area of lower concentration to an area of higher concentration Requires cells to expend energy Three types: Transport Proteins Exocytosis Endocytosis
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Transport Proteins Actively pump small molecules and ions across the cell membrane
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Exocytosis removal of waste materials from cell Larger molecules
Vesicles made by the cell fuse with the cell membrane releasing their contents into the external environment
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Exocytosis
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Endocytosis Taking material into the cell by formation of a pocket of the cell membrane to make a vesicle Pinocytosis: vesicle contains fluids (cell drinking) Phagocytosis: vesicle contain large particles (cell eating)
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Endocytosis
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Active transport
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