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____________________________ boundary found in _________ cells.
Hydrophobic tails of phospholipids make molecules line up as a _________________ _________________ with polar head facing ___________ and nonpolar tails facing __________. Made mainly of __________________________ & __________________________ Cell Membrane in a Nutshell ( ) If found on top of a phospholipid the whole structure is called a ____________________ If found on top of a protein the whole structure is called a ______________________ Used to ________________________; cell ID tags Carbohydrates-in chain form; on outside surface Provides _______________ for ______________ cells (no cell wall) Helps prevent fatty acid tails from ______________ together Cholesterol-only in ______________ cells. Transport proteins (also called integral)- _______________________ through the membrane; used as ________________________________________ to move things in or out of the cell. On inside surface, __________ the cell membrane to cell’s internal support structure (cytoskeletal) giving cell its shape. “Anchor proteins” On the outside surface, __________________________ to inside cell; “receptor proteins” Peripheral- on the inside or outside surface. Can be partially embedded into the cell membrane or can be found attached to an integral membrane protein. Proteins- Other components of the cell membrane Helps maintain ______________________________ ______________________ what enters & leaves the cell Allow certain molecules to pass through; but keeps others out Membranes are _________________________ _____________________=Semi-permeable, picky Function ____________________________ boundary found in _________ cells. A cell is defined as the smallest ____________________ unit of life. In order to maintain ______________________, _____________________ must be moved into the cell and ______________________ must be transported out of the cell. In addition, some cells produce _______________ and other materials designated for export. All materials moving in and out of the cell must pass through the ____________________________________, a ________________________ I. CELL TRANSPORT ATP
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FACILITATED DIFFUSION PROTEIN PUMP ENDOCYTOSIS/EXOCYTOSIS
Active or Passive? _____________ Requires Energy? _____________ What moves? _______________ How? ____________________ Other factors? _______________ ___________________________ Active or Passive? _____________ Requires Energy? _____________ What moves? _______________ How? ____________________ Other factors? _______________ ___________________________ Active or Passive? _____________ Requires Energy? _____________ What moves? _______________ How? ____________________ Other factors? _______________ ___________________________ Active or Passive? _______________________ Requires Energy? ________________________ What moves? ___________________________ How? ________________________ Other factors? __________________________ ______________________________________ Active or Passive? _______________________ Requires Energy? ________________________ What moves? ___________________________ How? __________________________________ Other factors? __________________________ ______________________________________ Cell in hypertonic solution Sketch endocytosis: Cell in isotonic solution Sketch exocytosis: Cell in hypotonic solution SIMPLE DIFFUSION OSMOSIS FACILITATED DIFFUSION PROTEIN PUMP ENDOCYTOSIS/EXOCYTOSIS Movement of solutes across a membrane from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration more crowdedless crowded Moves “with the concentration gradient” No energy required—Passive Transport Happens with small, uncharged molecules that are non-polar Examples: O2 gas Movement of water (solvent) across a membrane from an area with a higher concentration of solvent to an area of lower concentration of solvent “high waterlow water”, “low solutehigh solute” No energy required—Passive Hypertonic– a solution or side of the membrane with a higher concentration of solutes Hypotonic- a solution on one side of the membrane with a lower concentration of solutes Isotonic- a solution that has a concentration of solutes that is equal on both sides of the membrane “Water wants to move to the hypertonic side of the membrane” Facilitator = “helpler” Movement of solutes across a membrane from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration through a protein channel No energy required—Passive Happens with molecules that can’t cross the membrane on their own because they are polar or are too large. Just like simple diffusion, but with a protein channel to facilitate the process Movement of solutes across a membrane from an area of lower concentration to an area of higher concentration less crowdedmore crowded Moves “against the concentration gradient” ATP Energy required—Active Transport Proteins responsible for transporting in this way called pumps Bulk movement of particles across a membrane, into the cell or out of the cell Requires membrane vesicle formation or fusion Requires ATP energy: Active Transport Endocytosis = cell eats Pocket forms in cell membrane around particle to be consumed Vesicle forms Exocytosis=cell expels Vesicle carrying particles fuses with membrane Releases contents to the outside environment definitions Solute: what is dissolved in a solution. Ex: salt ions, sugar Solvent: the fluid that solutes are in. In biology, water. Active Transport: requires energy Passive Transport: does not require energy Concentration gradient: A difference in solute concentration between two regions
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