1 / 35

CELL TRANSPORT

CELL TRANSPORT. PASSIVE & ACTIVE TRANSPORT CLASSROOM BOOK: 7-3 ZEBRA BOOK: 7-4. Cell Membrane. MAIN FUNCTION IS TO REGULATE WHAT ENTERS AND LEAVES THE CELL TO MAINTAIN HOMEOSTASIS A STABLE, INTERNAL ENVIRONMENT. HOMEOSTASIS - EXAMPLES OF.

baird
Download Presentation

CELL TRANSPORT

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CELL TRANSPORT PASSIVE & ACTIVE TRANSPORT CLASSROOM BOOK: 7-3 ZEBRA BOOK: 7-4

  2. Cell Membrane • MAIN FUNCTION IS TO REGULATE WHAT ENTERS AND LEAVES THE CELL TO MAINTAIN HOMEOSTASIS • A STABLE, INTERNAL ENVIRONMENT

  3. HOMEOSTASIS - EXAMPLES OF • SHIVERING WHEN COLD TO GENERATE HEAT WITHIN THE BODY • SWEATING WHEN HOT TO COOL THE INTERNAL CORE TEMPERATURE.

  4. THE CELL MEMBRANE • MADE OF PHOSPHOLIPIDS AND PROTEINS

  5. LIPID BILAYER STRUCTURE

  6. LIPID BILAYER • TWO LAYERS OF PHOSPHOLIPIDS • PHOSPHATE HEAD IS POLAR (WATER LOVING) • FATTY ACID TAILS ARE NON POLAR (WATER HATING)

  7. PROTEINS • ARE EMBEDDED IN THE CELL MEMBRANE THAT ACT AS DOORS SO SUBSTANCES CAN ENTER AND EXIT.

  8. CELL MEMBRANE • ALSO REFERRED TO AS: • LIPID BILAYER • PHOSPHOLIPID BILAYER • PLASMA MEMBRANE

  9. SELECTIVELY PERMEABLE • THE CELL MEMBRANE WILL ALLOW CERTAIN SUBSTANCES TO PASS THROUGH EASILY • EX: WATER, SUGARS, OXYGEN, CARBON DIOXIDE

  10. SELECTIVELY PERMEABLE • AND, KEEP OTHER SUBSTANCES FROM PASSING THROUGH THE CELL MEMBRANE • EX. LARGE LIPIDS, PROTEINS, CARBOHYDRATES,

  11. TRANSPORT IN THE CELL • CAN BE • PASSIVE TRANSPORT OR • ACTIVE TRANSPORT

  12. PASSIVE TRANSPORT • NO ENERGY INPUT BY THE CELL IS NEEDED FOR MOVEMENT TO OCCUR • THE 3 TYPES OF PASSIVE TRANSPORT ARE: • DIFFUSION • OSMOSIS • FACILITATED DIFFUSION

  13. DIFFUSION • THE MOVEMENT OF MOLECULES FROM AN AREA OF HIGH CONCENTRATION TO AN AREA OF LOW CONCENTRATION ACROSS A SELECTIVELY PERMEABLE MEMBRANE

  14. OSMOSIS • THE MOVEMENT OF WATER FROM AN AREA OF HIGH CONCENTRATION TO AN AREA OF LOW CONCENTRATION ACROSS A SELECTIVELY PERMEABLE MEMBRANE. • THE WAY THAT WATER MOVES IN LIVING ORGANISMS

  15. OSMOSIS • IS HOW WATER MOVES IN LIVING ORGANISMS

  16. THREE TYPES OF OSMOTIC SOLUTIONS • HYPERTONIC • HYPOTONIC • ISOTONIC

  17. OSMOTIC SOLUTIONS • HYPOTONIC - THE CONCENTRATION OF SOLUTE MOLECULES OUTSIDE OF THE CELL IS LOWER THAN THE CONCENTRATION OF SOLUTE MOLECULES IN THE CYTOPLASM. • (LESS WATER INSIDE OF THE CELL THAN OUTSIDE OF THE CELL)

  18. Hypotonic Solutions

  19. RED BLOOD CELL IN A HYPOTONIC SOLUTION • WHICH WAY DOES THE WATER MOVE? • WHY?

  20. OSMOTIC SOLUTIONS • HYPERTONIC – THE CONCENTRATION OF SOLUTE MOLECULES OUTSIDE OF THE CELL IS HIGHER THAN THE CONCENTRATION OF SOLUTE MOLECULES INSIDE OF THE CELL. • (MORE WATER INSIDE OF THE CELL THAN OUTSIDE OF THE CELL)

  21. Hypertonic Solutions

  22. RED BLOOD CELL IN A HYPERTONIC SOLUTION • WHICH WAY DOES THE WATER MOVE? • WHY?

  23. OSMOTIC SOLUTIONS • ISOTONIC – THE CONCENTRATION OF SOLUTES INSIDE AND OUTSIDE OF THE CELL ARE EQUAL. • (THE AMOUNT OF WATER INSIDE AND OUTSIDE OF THE CELL IS EQUAL).

  24. Isotonic Solutions

  25. RED BLOOD CELL IN AN ISOTONIC SOLUTION • WHICH WAY DOES THE WATER MOVE? • WHY?

  26. FACILITATED DIFFUSION • THE MOVEMENT OF MOLECULES ACROSS A SELECTIVELY PERMEABLE MEMBRANE WITH THE ASSISTANCE OF CARRIER PROTEINS IN THE MEMBRANE

  27. FACILITATED DIFFUSION • PROCESS USED FOR MOLECULES THAT CANNOT DIFFUSE RAPIDLY THROUGH CELL MEMBRANES • MOLECULES MAY NOT BE SOLUBLE TO LIPIDS OR TOO LARGE TO PASS THROUGH THE MEMBRANE

  28. EXAMPLE OF FACILITATED DIFFUSION • TRANSPORT OF GLUCOSE • CARRIER PROTEINS MOVE GLUCOSE OUT OF THE CELL TO WHERE IT IS NEEDED

  29. ACTIVE TRANSPORT • REQUIRES ENERGY INPUT BY THE CELL FOR MOVEMENT TO OCCUR. • INCLUDES: • SODIUM-POTASSIUM PUMP • ENDOCYTOSIS • EXOCYTOSIS • ELECTRON TRANSPORT CHAIN

  30. ENDOCYTOSIS(ENTERING THE CELL) • TAKING MATERIAL INTO THE CELL BY MEANS OF INFOLDINGS OR POCKETS OF THE CELL MEMBRANE • THE POCKET FORMS A VACUOLE AND CARRIES THE MATERIAL

  31. Endocytosis

  32. ENDOCYTOSIS – TWO TYPES • PINOCYTOSIS – THE TRANSPORT OF SOLUTES OR FLUIDS • PHAGOCYTOSIS – THE TRANSPORT OF LARGE PARTICLES OR WHOLE CELLS

  33. EXOCYTOSIS(EXITING THE CELL) • THE PROCESS BY WHICH CELLS REMOVE MATERIALS FROM THE CELL • REVERSE PROCESS OF ENDOCYTOSIS

  34. EXOCYTOSIS

More Related