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Major Ways Molecules Move Across Cell Membrane Name five different ways that molecules can move across the cell membrane:

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Presentation on theme: "Major Ways Molecules Move Across Cell Membrane Name five different ways that molecules can move across the cell membrane:"— Presentation transcript:

1 Major Ways Molecules Move Across Cell Membrane Name five different ways that molecules can move across the cell membrane:

2 Cell Membranes and Fluid Balance Composition of cell membrane? Intracellular vs. interstitial vs. extracellular fluid compartments Composition of the fluids in these compartments? How is composition maintained? Osmolarity vs. tonicity

3 Figure taken from: http://sorrel.humboldt.edu/~jlg21/Zoo%20310/Lab%202%20ADAM%20electrolytes/fluid%20compartments.gif Extracellular

4 Figure 5-3b What are the major differences in composition of the intracellular and extracellular fluid? Between the interstitial fluid and the plasma?

5 Figure 5-5 1.Simple diffusion Characteristics:

6 Figure 5-6

7 Table 5-1

8 Figure 5-7 (3 of 3) 2. Facilitated Diffusion Characteristics:

9 Figure 5-9 - Overview

10 Figure 5-10

11 Figure 5-14

12 Figure 5-15

13 Figure 5-11

14 Figure 5-4 3.Primary Active Transport Characteristics:

15 Table 5-2

16 Figure 5-16

17 Figure 5-17 - Overview

18 4.Secondary Active Transport Characteristics:

19 Figure 5-18 - Overview

20 Figure 5-12 - Overview

21 Table 5-3

22 Figure 5-19

23 Table 5-4 The glucose transporters demonstrate common characteristics of all protein transporters:

24 Figure 5-20 1. Similarly shaped/charged molecules can compete for transport

25 Figure 5-21 - Overview 2. Some similarly shaped molecules can bind, but when they do, transport is stopped (competitive inhibition)

26 Figure 5-22 3. When the number of transporters is fixed, increasing the concentration of the transported molecule will eventually saturate the transporters, and the rate will remain at its maximum (unless more transporters are made).

27 Test Your Knowledge: 1.Steroid hormones pass directly through the cell membrane to activate protein production. What type of transport is this? Why? 2.Why can urea diffuse freely from plasma into cells when most cholesterol, although lipid-soluble, must cross a membrane by receptor-mediated endocytosis? 3.From the graph below, what transport method appears to be used for the transfer of substance Z into a cell? Explain. 4.Choose A if the statement refers to active transport, B if the statement refers to passive transport, and C if it can refer to both. Movement of molecules from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration. Movement of molecules via proteins embedded in the cell membrane, requires ATP. Movement of molecules against the concentration gradient. A co-transporter is involved in molecule movement. Movement of molecules that requires ATP. This tends to create an equilibrium state. ECF ICF [X] How could you test whether it was primary or secondary active transport?

28 Figure 5-24 - Overview Receptor mediated endocytosis

29 Figure 5-25 Transepithelial transport

30 Figure 5-26

31 How do cells maintain their volume? What factors influence their ability to maintain their volume? Osmolarity of the cell and solution surrounding it Tonicity of the solution outside the cell Movement of water toward the area of highest solute concentration

32 Figure 5-29 - Overview The solution with the highest solute concentration has the highest osmotic pressure

33 Table 5-6 Osmolarity = total number of dissolved particles in solution Osmolarity = molar concentration X number of particles in solution Osmolarity of 2M glucose? 1M NaCl? 1M MgCl2?

34 Table 5-7 Tonicity describes the volume change that occur if a cell were placed in that solution, after the cell has come to equilibrium with the solution. Tonicity is not measured in units, it is only a comparative term. Can osmolarity tell you whether a solution is hypo-, iso-, or hyper-tonic?

35 Figure 5-30a

36 Figure 5-30b

37 Figure 5-31a

38 Figure 5-31b

39 Figure 5-31c

40 Figure 5-31d

41 Table 5-8

42 Table 5-9

43 Test Your Knowledge: 1.Which of the following solutions have the most water per unit volume: 1 M glucose, 1 M NaCl, or 1OsM NaCl ? How do you know? Two compartments are separated aby a membrane that is permeable to water and urea but not to NaCl. Which way will water move when the following solutions are placed in the two compartments? Compartment AMembraneCompartment B a)1 M NaCl|1 OsM NaCl b)1 M urea|2M urea c)1 OsM NaCl|1 OsM urea You have a patient who lost 1 liter of blood, and you need to restore volume quickly while waiting for a blood transfusion to arrive from the blood bank. a)Which would be better to administer: 5% dextrose in water or 0.9% NaCl in water? Defend your choice. b)How much of your solution of choice would you have to administer to return blood volume to normal?

44 Resting Membrane Potential The relative charge difference (electrical gradient) between the intracellular and extracellular compartments. What can influence the charges on the inside or outside of the cell? Charge-charge interactions Activity of active transport pumps Relative concentration of each ion

45 Figure 5-32 - Overview

46 Figure 5-33

47 Figure 5-34a

48 Figure 5-34b

49 Figure 5-34c

50 Figure 5-35

51 Figure 5-36

52 Figure 5-37


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