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Chapter 5 Homeostasis & The Plasma Membrane
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It’s all about balance! Failure to adjust….death Cells maintain balance by controlling materials entering/leaving
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Concentrations outside the cell change Plasma membrane must be able to maintain balance Selective Permeability-property that allows some materials to pass through while keeping others out
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Membrane Structure Made of two layers made up of sheets of lipid molecules-lipid bilayer
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Membrane Structure Proteins are embedded in the bilayer Think of raisins in raisin bread
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Fluid Mosaic Model The phospholipid bilayer acts more like a liquid than a solid.
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The Phospholipid Bilayer
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Most lipids have two fatty acids attached to glycerol The third fatty acid is replaced by a phosphate group-phospholipid Phospholipids-polar, water-soluble head + long, nonpolar, insoluble tail Align to form double layer with “heads” on outside and “tails” on the inside
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Diffusion Cells maintain homeostasis by controlling the movement of substances across the membrane Cells must use NRG to transport some substances…..Ex- Active Transport! Other substances move across the membrane with no NRG required
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Diffusion Diffusion is the net movement of particles from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration. Goal of diffusion=Dynamic Equilibrium Continuous movement with no concentration change Concentration gradient-difference in concentration across space
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Dynamic Equilibrium
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Diffusion!!
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Osmosis-Diffusion of Water Osmosis is the diffusion of water molecules through a selectively permeable membrane Movement from high to low concentration Type of passive transport! Isotonic solution-concentration of dissolved substances equal to concentration inside the cell…..NO NET MOVEMENT!
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Isotonic Solution
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Hypotonic vs Hypertonic Hypotonic-solution where concentration of dissolved substances is lower than inside the cell Water moves into cell…swelling! Increases cell pressure-Turgor Pressure Hypertonic-solution where concentration of dissolved substances is higher than inside the cell Water moves out of cell…Plasmolysis
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Dealing with Osmosis Cells must compensate for the water that enters or exits the cell. Animal Cells- Must maintain isotonic environment Plant Cells- Prefer a hypotonic environment
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Plants vs. Animals
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Protists Have contractile vacuoles that actively remove water from the cell.
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Crossing the Membrane Diffusion through ion channels: Ion Channels- transport proteins with polar pores that ions can pass through. Pore is the thickness of the membrane Ion does not have touch the nonpolar interior of the bilayer.
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Ion Channel
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Facilitated Diffusion Carrier proteins allow needed substances to move through membrane by binding, carrying, and releasing substances. This movement is called facilitated diffusion
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Facilitated Diffusion Carrier proteins change shape using chemical energy to move particle through the membrane Once particle is passed, original protein shape is restored
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Facilitated Diffusion
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Active Transport In order to move particles from a lower concentration to higher concentration a cell must use energy…Active Transport Proton pumps- specialized proteins for pushing different substances against the concentration gradient. Need ATP for energy!!!!!
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Active Transport
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Sodium-Potassium Pump Four Steps to the Pump: 1. Three Na ions attach to the pump. 2. Pump changes shape, transporting the ions across the membrane. 3. Two K ions outside bind to the pump 4. Two K ions are transported are released inside the cell.
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Transport of Large Particles Endocytosis-process in which cell surrounds and takes in material from its environment Engulfed and enclosed by portion of cell membrane Exocytosis-expelling wastes from interior to exterior environment
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Endocytosis Types
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Exocytosis
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