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Cell Transport

Cell Transport. Cell Membrane. The membrane is mostly made up of phospholipids that have a hydrophilic heads and two hydrophobic tails. When these phospholipid molecules form the cell membrane, they arrange themselves in a bilayer that has a hydrophobic interior region

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Cell Transport

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  1. Cell Transport

  2. Cell Membrane • The membrane is mostly made up of phospholipids that have a hydrophilic heads and two hydrophobic tails.

  3. When these phospholipid molecules form the cell membrane, they arrange themselves in a bilayer that has a hydrophobic interior region • Hydrophobic – water hating

  4. Water molecules are small enough to pass throught the these bilayer membranes. • Sugar molecules are both polar and too large to easily pass through the membrane.

  5. Semi-permeable Membrane • Selectively permeable – membranes that allow some things through, the cell membrane is selectively permeable, oxygen and water move freely across the cell’s membrane by diffusion • bilayer nature of biological membranes • water can go through • many solutes, either because they are polar or are too large, will not go through the membrane fast enough

  6. Passive Transport • Diffusion and Osmosis are both types of PASSIVE TRANSPORT - that is, no energy is required for the molecules to move into or out of the cell

  7. Diffusion • Diffusion - the process by which molecules spread from areas of high concentration, to areas of low concentration. • Equilibrium - when the molecules are even throughout a space • Concentration gradient - a difference between concentrations in a space.

  8. Osmosis • Osmosis – diffusion of water over a membrane • In the picture, water molecules are moving across a semipermeable membrane. Water molecules - blue shapes solute - green. • The solute is more concentrated on the right side to start with, which causes molecules to move across the membrane toward the left until equilibrium is reached.

  9. Osmosis A simple rule to remember: Salt is a solute, when it is concentrated inside or outside the cell, it will draw the water in its direction. This is also why you get thirsty after eating something salty.

  10. Osmosis

  11. Isotonic • If the concentration of solute (salt) is equal on both sides, the water will move back in forth but it won't have any result on the overall amount of water on either side. • "ISO" means the same

  12. Hypotonic • The word "HYPO" means less, in this case there are less solute (salt) molecules outside the cell, since salt sucks, water will move into the cell. • The cell will gain water and grow larger. In plant cells, the central vacuoles will fill and the plant becomes stiff and rigid, the cell wall keeps the plant from bursting • In animal cells, the cell may be in danger of bursting, organelles called CONTRACTILE VACUOLES will pump water out of the cell to prevent this.

  13. Hypotonic

  14. Hypertonic • The word "HYPER" means more, in this case there are more solute (salt) molecules outside the cell, which causes the water to be sucked in that direction. • In plant cells, the central vacuole loses water and the cells shrink, causing wilting. • In animal cells, the cells also shrink. • In both cases, the cell may die. • This is why it is dangerous to drink sea water - its a myth that drinking sea water will cause you to go insane, but people marooned at sea will speed up dehydration (and death) by drinking sea water. • This is also why "salting fields" was a common tactic during war, it would kill the crops in the field, thus causing food shortages.

  15. Hypertonic

  16. Blood Cells

  17. Plant Cells

  18. Active Transport • Sometimes, large molecules cannot cross the plasma membrane, and are "helped" across by carrier proteins - this process is called facilitated diffusion. • Active Transport - When cells must move materials in an opposite direction - against a concentration gradient. It requires Energy. • Proteins or Pumps are found in the cell membrane transport molecules across the membrane.

  19. Molecular Transport • Proteins are used to move small molecules such as calcium, potassium, and sodium ions across the membrane

  20. Endocytosis • Endo – means in or enter • cell takes in large particles by engulfing them • Phagocytosis - "cell eating" - extensions off cytoplasm surround a particle and package it within a food vacuole and then the cell engulfs it. Ex. Amoebas use this process. • Pinocytosis - the process of taking up liquid from the surrounding environment. Tiny pockets form along the membrane, fill with liquid, and pinch off

  21. Exocytosis • cell gets rid of particles, opposite of endocytosis • Exo – means out or exit

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