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Cell Transport
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Concentration Gradient
-When a substance is more concentrated in one area than another, it forms a concentration gradient, a gradual difference in concentration of a substance as a function of distance.
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Concentration Gradient
-Molecules and ions are in constant motion because they have energy. They will naturally move from a region of high concentration to a region of low concentration. -This is called movement down a concentration gradient. It requires no energy input to occur as the particles already have energy.
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Passive Transport -allows substances to pass through the cell membrane down the concentration gradient from high to low concentration without the cell using energy
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3 Different Types of Passive Transport
1. Diffusion 2. Facilitated Diffusion 3. Osmosis
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Diffusion small nonpolar molecules like oxygen and carbon dioxide cross the phospholipid bilayer, easily slipping between phospholipids in and out of the cell
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Continuing movement of particles
-Even when equilibrium is reached, particles of a solution will continue to move across the membrane in both directions but this movement is not considered diffusion because diffusion requires a concentration gradient to occur.
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Facilitated Diffusion
- special diffusion -substances diffuse across the membrane through special transport proteins -each protein only allows a specific substance to pass through the cell membrane
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Facilitated Diffusion
-Molecules that cannot directly diffuse across the membrane, such as large molecules, charged ions, and polar molecules, pass through special protein channels.
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Osmosis -the diffusion of water through a selectively permeable membrane
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Osmosis: An Example of Facilitated Diffusion
-The inside of a cell’s lipid bilayer is hydrophobic—or “water-hating.” -water molecules have a tough time passing through the cell membrane
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Osmosis: An Example of Facilitated Diffusion
-Many cells contain channel proteins,known as aquaporins, tubes with hydrophilic centers, that allow water to pass right through them. Without aquaporins,water would diffuse in and out of cells very slowly.
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Osmosis -For organisms to survive, they must have a way to balance the intake and loss of water. -The net movement of water out of or into a cell exerts a force known as osmotic pressure.
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Volume changes -Because the plasma membrane is impermeable to some solutes, osmosis can change the volume of fluid inside a cell.
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Water in or out? -Placing cells in solutions of different concentrations affects whether water will enter or exit the cell; there are 3 possible types of solutions a cell can be exposed to
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1. Isotonic Solutions - there is an equal amount of water and solute inside the cell as outside the cell - when cells are placed in isotonic solutions, water will enter and exit the cell at the same rate -cell will remain the same size
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2.Hypotonic Solutions -when cells are placed in hypotonic solutions, water will flow into the cell because there is more solute in the cell than outside the cell -causes the cell to swell
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3.Hypertonic Solutions -when cells are exposed to hypertonic solutions, water will flow out of the cell because there is more solute outside of the cell than inside the cell -causes the cell to shrink
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If the cell is placed in a solution that is…..
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Using energy - Some cells require creation and maintenance of a concentration gradient, and others require materials too large for membrane proteins to enter or exit.
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Active Transport -the movement of materials against a concentration gradient -allows substances to move across the cell membrane from an area of low concentration to an area of high concentration -requires energy in the form of ATP
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-The active transport of ions across a cell membrane is generally carried out by ion pumps, proteins found in the membrane. Active Transport
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Ion pumps -Many cells use such proteins to move calcium, potassium, and sodium ions across cell membranes. Ex> a nerve cell needs a high concentration of sodium ions outside the cell and a high concentration of potassium ions in the cytoplasm
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Molecular Transport -Macromolecules and other large materials can also be actively transported across the cell membrane by processes known as endocytosis and exocytosis. -The transport of these larger materials sometimes involves changes in the shape of the cell membrane.
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Transport into and out of the cell
1. Exocytosis 2. Endocytosis
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Exocytosis -movement of materials out of the cell
-The membrane of the vesicle surrounding the material fuses with the cell membrane, forcing the contents out of the cell. -Hormones and neurotransmitters are released from the cell this way to their destinations.
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Exocytosis
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Endocytosis -movement of materials into the cell
-Endocytosis is the process of taking material into the cell by means of infoldings, or pockets, of the cell membrane. -The pocket that results breaks loose from the outer portion of the cell membrane and forms a vesicle within the cytoplasm.
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Endocytosis
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Types of Endocytosis 1.Phagocytosis -the plasma membrane surrounds a large solid piece of material and brings it into the cell Ex>Amoebas use this method for taking in food.
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Types of Endocytosis 2. Pinocytosis
-In pinocytosis, cells take in liquid from the surrounding environment by forming tiny pockets along the cell membrane. -The pockets fill with liquid and pinch off to form vesicles within the cell.
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