1 / 28

Cell Transport

Cell Transport. EQ: Explain how active and passive transport help the cell maintain homeostasis. SC B-2.5 Explain how active, passive, and facilitated transport serve to maintain homeostasis of the cell. CELL TRANSPORT CHAPTER 7 SECTION 3. DEFINITIONS:

jsallee
Télécharger la présentation

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 EQ: Explain how active and passive transport help the cell maintain homeostasis. SC B-2.5 Explain how active, passive, and facilitated transport serve to maintain homeostasis of the cell

  2. CELL TRANSPORTCHAPTER 7 SECTION 3 • DEFINITIONS: • Equilibrium: state that exists when the concentration of a substance is the same throughout a space • Concentration Gradient: difference in the concentration of a substance across a distance

  3. Passive Transport • dfn: movement of substances across a cell membrane without requiring energy expenditure by the cell • Types: • Diffusion • Facilitated Diffusion • Osmosis

  4. Passive transport • Particles are said to move “down their concentration gradient” • It is free!

  5. DIFFUSION • The movement of particles from regions of higher density to regions of lower density • Also called simple diffusion • Small, nonpolar molecules pass through the cell membrane by simple diffusion • Ex: oxygen, carbon dioxide

  6. SIMPLE DIFFUSION

  7. DIFFUSION RATE • Rate of diffusion affected by: • Temperature • Surface area • Concentration gradient • Size of molecule

  8. SIMPLE DIFFUSION ACROSS a MEMBRANE

  9. FACILITATED DIFFUSION • Same as simple diffusion (particles move down their concentration gradient) except particles require the use of a transport protein to cross cell membrane

  10. FACILITATED DIFFUSION • Because it requires a transport protein there is an upper limit to the # of molecules that can enter/exit a cell at any given moment • (called Tmax)

  11. Facilitated Diffusion • Glucose enters cells via facilitated diffusion

  12. OSMOSIS Osmosis : the diffusion of water from a more dilute solution  a more concentrated solution through a membrane that is permeable to water but not to the solute solute: what is dissolved in solvent solvent: what dissolves the solute

  13. Osmosis • Allows cells to maintain water balance as their environment changes http://www.stolaf.edu/people/giannini/flashanimat/transport/osmosis.swf

  14. Osmosis • Water Channels (called aquapores) in membrane to allow polar water molecules to enter/exit cell • In humans used by: • Respiratory system • Reproductive system • Urinary system (water conservation) • Digestive system • Homeostasis of body temperature

  15. Osmosis in Red Blood Cells • Hypertonic Solutions • Concentration of solutes higher than that in cytoplasm • Water follows its concentration gradient and moves from ______________ to ___________ • Cells will _________________, called crenation http://www.tvdsb.on.ca/WESTMIN/science/sbi3a1/cells/Osmosis.htm

  16. Osmosis in Red Blood Cells • If the solution is hypotonic, there is a lower solute concentration outside the cell than inside the cell • Water will move _____________ • The cell will __________, called hemolysis.

  17. Osmosis with Red Blood Cells • If the solution the red blood cell is in has the same concentration of water as the cytoplasm in the cell there will be _________ movement of water. • This is called an isotonic solution.

  18. Osmosis in Plant Cells

  19. PASSIVE TRANSPORT • http://www.northland.cc.mn.us/biology/Biology1111/animations/transport1.html

  20. ACTIVE TRANSPORT • Dfn: the movement of substances against their concentration gradient (against the flow) • Substances are moving from an area of lower concentration to an area of higher concentration • This requires the cell to use energy (ATP)

  21. ACTIVE TRANSPORT • TWO TYPES: • PUMPS • VESICLES • ENDOCYTOSIS • EXOCYTOSIS

  22. ACTIVE TRANSPORT PUMPS • Use a carrier protein (like facilitated diffusion) but requires expenditure of energy • Most common pump: • Na+/K+/ATP pump

  23. Na+/K+/ATP pump • A carrier protein that uses ATP (1) to actively transport sodium ions (3) out of the cell and potassium ions (2) into the cell. • This pump keeps the [Na+] inside the cell lower so that osmosis will not cause the cell to swell with water.

  24. ACTIVE TRANSPORTVESICLES • Used to transport molecules that are too large to fit thru a carrier protein. • Endocytosis • Cell “eating” (phagocytosis) or cell “drinking” (pinocytosis) • Cell wraps membrane around material forming vesicle which is taken into cell • Exocytosis • For moving material out of cell • Vesicle fuses with cell membrane releasing contents outside of cell

  25. ENDOCYTOSIS • EXOCYTOSIS

  26. Endocytosis Exocytosis

  27. Active Transport Animation • http://www.brookscole.com/chemistry_d/templates/student_resources/shared_resources/animations/ion_pump/ionpump.html

  28. Review Time • http://www.learnerstv.com/animation/animation.php?ani=164&cat=biology

More Related