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Published byAubrey Bartholomew Henry Modified over 9 years ago
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Transport across the cell membrane Active Transport Active Transport – requires energy in the form of ATP (Na+K+ pump, endocytosis & exocytosis) Passive Transport Passive Transport – no energy required (diffusion, osmosis, facilitated diffusion)
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Active transport is responsible for cells containing relatively high concentrations of potassium ions but low concentrations of sodium ions. The mechanism responsible for this is the sodium-potassium pump which moves these two ions in opposite directions across the plasma membrane.
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Concentrations of Na+ and K+ ions on the two sides of the membrane are interdependent = same carrier protein transports both ions. The carrier is an ATP-ase and it pumps 3 sodium ions out of the cell for every 2 potassium ions pumped in.
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Function of the pump resting potentialresting potential The Na+/K+-pump helps maintain resting potential that assist s transport & regulates cell volume resting potential sodiumsodium low concentration of sodium ions within cellsodium potassiumpotassium high levels of potassium ions within the cellpotassium
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Cells need to bring in substances (glucose, amino acids) by facilitated diffusion Carrier proteins combine with and transport substances across the cell membrane Possible because active transport maintains a concentration gradient Facilitated Diffusion
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Movement of sodium from one side of a cell membrane to the other side creates an osmotic gradient that drives the absorption of water. Water diffuses back into the cell carrying needed substances Osmosis
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Endocytosis & Exocytosis Larger substances are moved into & out of the cell by vesicle formation Requires ATP
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