Exercise 5A The Cell: Transport and Membrane Permeability.

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Exercise 5A The Cell: Transport and Membrane Permeability
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Transcript of Exercise 5A The Cell: Transport and Membrane Permeability.

Page 1: Exercise 5A The Cell: Transport and Membrane Permeability.

Exercise 5A

The Cell: Transport and Membrane Permeability

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There are two general categories of cellular transport mechanisms:

Page 3: Exercise 5A The Cell: Transport and Membrane Permeability.

• Passive• Simple diffusion• Facilitated or protein mediated• Filtration• Osmosis

• Active• ATP driven solute pumps• Vesicular

• Endocytosis• Phagocytosis• Bulk-phase endocytocysis (pinocytosis)

• Phagocytosis

Types of transport

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Rate of diffusion is influenced by:

• concentration• temperature• molecular or atomic weight of solute• density of solvent

• gases allow for the quickest• liquids are intermediate• solids allow for the slowest

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Diffusion

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Diffusion of dye in agar

KMnO2

Methyleneblue

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Facilitated diffusion

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Osmosis a.

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Osmosis b.

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What’s an “Osmometer”?

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Normal erythrocytes in an isotonic solution

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RBCs in hypertonic saline solution:crenation

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Isotonic vs hypotonic

Normal RBCs:0.9% NaCl

Hemolysis:Distilled water

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Active transport requires cellular energy

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Exocytosis

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Endocytosis (a.k.a. pinocytosis)

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Phagocytosis: cellular eating

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Active transport: AntiportThe sodium/potassium pump

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Active transport: SymportThe sodium/glucose symporter

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Transport Animations

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