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September 11, 2012 Standard: SAP1d-Relate cellular metabolism and transport to homeostasis and cellular reproduction. Warm-Up: Complete ARG 5.1 located on your desk. Read the paragraphs and answer the questions. Write the answers only in your composition notebooks.
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Cell Physiology: Membrane Transport Membrane Transport Intracellular fluid – inside the cell Interstitial fluid – outside the cell; contains nutrition for the cell (amino acids, sugar, fatty acids, vitamins) A healthy cell must be able to extract what it needs from the interstitial fluid.
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Passive Transport Mechanisms (require no energy) A. Diffusion- solutes 1. Molecules move from concentrations 2. Substances move down their concentration gradient
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3. Solutes -must be lipid- soluble or small. 4. O and CO 2 move across the cell membrane through diffusion
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B.Osmosis - diffusion of water through a selectively permeable membrane
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Hypertonic Solution Solute + solvent =solution Hyper (solute) =“high” concentration of solutes in the solution More solutes less water (solvent) Water moves out and cell shrinks
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Hypotonic Solution Hypo (solute) =“low” concentration of solutes in the solution Less solutes more water (solvent) Water moves in and cell swells
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Isotonic Solution Solutes in cell = solutes outside the cell Water moves in and out at the same rate (no net movement) A healthy cell
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Facilitated Diffusion C. Passive movement using a protein carrier molecule Glucose moves across the cell membrane this way.
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D.Filtration 1. Pressure is necessary to force (blood) substances through membrane. 2. Important in the capillaries and also the kidneys.
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Active Transport Mechanisms Require Energy (ATP) Three conditions where active transport is necessary: 1.Molecules are too large to pass through 2.Molecules are not lipid soluble 3. Molecules are moving against the concentration gradient
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Solute Pumping (Na+/K+ Pump) Substances move with protein carrier molecules (solute pumps) against the gradient. Ex. Amino acids are transported this way
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Bulk Transport Exocytosis- “out of cell” Cell products, hormones, and wastes in vesicle fuses with cell membrane. Fused area ruptures, spilling contents of sac outside of cell.
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Endocytosis Endo= “into” Extracellular components are engulfed, a vesicle is formed, it detaches itself from the membrane and moves into cytoplasm.
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Two types of Endocytosis: 1. Phagocytosis – ”cellular eating” uptake of solid particles 2. Pinocytosis – “cellular drinking” uptake of fluids
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