Homeostasis and Transport Movement of cellular materials in and out of the cell.

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Homeostasis and Transport Movement of cellular materials in and out of the cell.

Transcript of Homeostasis and Transport Movement of cellular materials in and out of the cell.

Page 1: Homeostasis and Transport Movement of cellular materials in and out of the cell.

Homeostasis and Transport

Movement of cellular materials in and out of the cell.

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Cell membranes help cells maintain homeostasis by controlling what substances may enter or leave cells.

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Cell membranes are selectively-permeable in that they allow only certain substances to pass.

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I - Passive Transport

• No energy input from the cell..

No ATP energy molecules used.

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Simplest type of Passive Transport: (simple) Diffusion

It is the (random) movement of molecules from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration.

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In other words…

• Materials move from where there’s more to where there’s less.

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This difference in concentration of molecules (over a given area)is called the concentration gradient

Diffusion movement occurs with, (or down) the concentration gradient.

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Diffusion is driven by the kinetic energy of the molecules.

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Kinetic Energy – Energy of Movement

from an area oflow tohigh

concentration

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• Eventually the process of diffusion reaches equilibrium.

• At equilibrium the concentration of molecules are the same throughout the space. (The concentration gradient disappears)

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Are the molecules still moving at this point (equilibrium)?

• Yes. Molecules of a substance are always in motion to some degree except at absolute zero.

The net movement is zero.

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Osmosis The process by which H2O molecules

diffuse across a cell membrane (selectively permeable membrane) from an area of HIGH concentration to LOW concentration.

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The net direction of water movement depends on the relative amount of solutes (dissolved substances) on the two sides of the cell membrane.

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THE THREE BASIC TYPES OF SOLUTIONS:

• Hypotonic

• Hypertonic

• Isotonic

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Hypotonic

• solute concentration outside the cell is lower than inside the cell cytosol.

• water diffuses into the cell

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Hypertonic

• solute concentration outside the cell is higher than inside the cell cytosol.

• water diffuses out of the cell

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Isotonic

• solute concentration outside and inside the cell are equal thus, NO net movement of water into or out of the cell

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How do cells deal with osmosis?

• Isotonic – usually no difficulties

interesting chromosomepattern makes thiscell have a happy

face

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Hypotonic environment• Unicellular freshwater organisms rid themselves

of excess water by an organelle called a contractile vacuole. (Other cells cannot get rid of the water and they may burst)

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What happens to ananimal cell under

different conditions?

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What happens to aplant cell under

different conditions?

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Facilitated Diffusion It is a type of passive transport in

which molecules pass through pores in the cell membrane. Carrier proteins help move molecules across the membrane.

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II - ACTIVE TRANSPORT

Cell expend energy to move materials.

Active transport always needs ATP energy molecules

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Active Transport is usually against the concentration gradient.

Materials move from low to high concentration.

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EXAMPLES OF ACTIVE TRANSPORT

• Cell Membrane Pumps (such as the Sodium-Potassium pump) It involves Carrier proteins

Sodium-Potassium Pump is important for nerve cells.

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• Endocytosis - cells take in fluids, large molecules, large particles and other cells.

Vesicles are formed to ingest materials.

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Two major types of endocytosis: • pinocytosis – movement of solutes or fluids

(Cell-drinking)

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• phagocytosis – movement of large particles or whole cells. (cell-eating)

Amoeba uses pseudopodia to engulf food.

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Exocytosis (the reverse of endocytosis)

• Vesicles fuse with the cell membrane, releasing their contents to the outside environment.

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• Unicellular organisms may get rid of wastes through exocytosis.