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Splash. A scuba diver breathing under water with the aid of an apparatus. Exchanging Materials with the Environment. The surface of an organism is a barrier against destructive forces.

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  1. Splash

  2. A scuba diver breathing under water with the aid of an apparatus Exchanging Materials with the Environment • The surface of an organism is a barrier against destructive forces. Food, water, waste, and communication signals must be allowed to pass through the barrier if the organism is to survive. Chapter Introduction 2

  3. End of the Introduction

  4. A Bacillus megaterium bacterium (x30,500) Living Systems as Compartments 3.1 Exchanged Materials • Their cytoplasm, or interior, of cells is surrounded by a wall made of carbohydrates and proteins and a membrane made largely of phospholipids. Materials needed for life must pass into this compartment to be useful. 3.1 Exchanged Materials 1

  5. Living Systems as Compartments 3.1 Exchanged Materials (cont.) • Organisms and their cells need water. Cells need the correct balance of ions, such as sodium (Na+), magnesium (Mg+2), calcium (Ca+2), hydrogen (H+), chloride (Cl–), and potassium (K+). Carbon dioxide is needed in autotrophs to build food molecules. Nutrients must enter cells to supply energy and building material for cell components. Some hormones are needed to transmit messages. Wastes, such as ammonium ion (NH4+), must exit. 3.1 Exchanged Materials 2

  6. Living Systems as Compartments 3.2 Membrane as Barrier • Membranes are composed of two thin, fluid, layers of phospholipids and proteins. Not all molecules are equally soluble in a membrane. • The nonpolar phospholipid tails of the lipid bilayer tend to repel charged particles such as ions but allow fat-soluble molecules to pass. • Usually, the polarity, size, and electric charge of molecules determine whether they can pass through a membrane. 3.2 Membrane as Barrier 1

  7. A selectively permeable membrane Click the image to view an animated version. 3.2 Membrane as Barrier 2

  8. Living Systems as Compartments 3.2 Membrane as Barrier (cont.) • Charged molecules such as the ions H+ or Ca+2 can pass through only with the help of special proteins, called transport proteins, that are embedded in the membrane. Proteins and other very large molecules cannot pass through a membrane without special processes. By limiting entry, a membrane is selectively permeable, which means that it regulates the exchange of materials in a very specific way. 3.2 Membrane as Barrier 3

  9. Living Systems as Compartments 3.2 Membrane as Barrier (cont.) • The structure of membranes is complex and allows them to perform many functions in the cell. Some proteins, calledglycoproteins, are embedded in membranes have sugars attached to them. Sugars also can be attached to the heads of membrane lipids (glycolipids). Glycoproteins and glycolipids act as antennae that receive chemical messages from other cells. 3.2 Membrane as Barrier 4

  10. The fluid-mosaic model of a membrane’s structure Click the image to view an animated version. 3.2 Membrane as Barrier 5

  11. End of Section 1

  12. How Cells Exchange Materials 3.3 Diffusion and Osmosis • Diffusion refers to the movement of molecules from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration. Diffusion is a random process, and the entropy of the system increases as it occurs. 3.3 Diffusion and Osmosis 1

  13. How Cells Exchange Materials 3.3 Diffusion and Osmosis (cont.) • A concentration gradient exists when there is a difference in concentration of molecules across a distance. Diffusion is a basic process underlying the movement of molecules into and out of cells. 3.3 Diffusion and Osmosis 2

  14. How Cells Exchange Materials 3.3 Diffusion and Osmosis (cont.) Molecules move from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration until the concentration is the same throughout. In (a), a crystal of potassium permanganate (KMnO4) was dropped into a glass of water. The molecules diffuse through the water (b) until they are evenly distributed throughout (c). 3.3 Diffusion and Osmosis 3

  15. How Cells Exchange Materials 3.3 Diffusion and Osmosis (cont.) • Movement of water down its concentration gradient is a special form of diffusion called osmosis. If the concentration of water outside the cell is higher than inside, water moves in, and the cell swells. If the concentration of water is higher inside the cell than outside, water is driven out and the cell shrinks. Outward pressure of a cell against its cell wall is called turgor. 3.3 Diffusion and Osmosis 5

  16. How Cells Exchange Materials 3.3 Diffusion and Osmosis (cont.) The motion of molecules in a glass container is random, but the net result is movement from an area of higher concentration to one of lower concentration. Initially, a barrier separates the two bulbs, with gas molecules (and potential energy) concentrated on the right side. When the barrier is removed, molecules begin to appear in the left-hand bulb. 3.3 Diffusion and Osmosis 6

  17. How Cells Exchange Materials Initially the cells are in a solution with the same concentration of dissolved material as is found inside the cells. This is called an isosmotic solution. The animal cell can survive only fairly small variations from this concentration. 3.3 Diffusion and Osmosis 7

  18. How Cells Exchange Materials 3.3 Diffusion and Osmosis (cont.) • The rate of diffusion, including osmosis, depends on the size of the concentration gradient and the surface area relative to the enclosed volume. 3.3 Diffusion and Osmosis 8

  19. How Cells Exchange Materials 3.4 Passive and Active Transport • Organisms must establish and maintain concentrations of materials inside their cells that may differ from concentrations resulting from diffusion. Membranes are permeable to many substances only with the help of transport proteins, which assist movement passively or actively. • Passive transport involves diffusion without any input of energy. • Active transport moves substances against their concentration gradients and thus requires energy. 3.4 Passive and Active Transport 1

  20. How Cells Exchange Materials 3.4 Passive and Active Transport (cont.) • Simple diffusion of neutral molecules such as oxygen or carbon dioxide into or out of a cell is a form of passive transport. Facilitated diffusion is passive transport that occurs with the help of transport proteins in the membrane. Facilitated diffusion makes transport more specific and speeds up the rate, but it does not work against the gradient. 3.4 Passive and Active Transport 2

  21. How Cells Exchange Materials 3.4 Passive and Active Transport (cont.) • Active transport requires energy to move substances, in addition to the help of transport proteins. Sources of energy include the hydrolysis of ATP and coupling the movement of one substance against its gradient to the movement of another down its gradient. 3.4 Passive and Active Transport 3

  22. How Cells Exchange Materials 3.4 Passive and Active Transport (cont.) • Maintaining specific gradients across cell membranes is essential to keep internal conditions in a range that permits life functions. Many necessary substances could not enter or leave cells without active transport. 3.4 Passive and Active Transport 4

  23. Passive and active transport Click the image to view an animated version. 3.4 Passive and Active Transport 5

  24. How Cells Exchange Materials 3.4 Passive and Active Transport (cont.) • To move very large molecules such as proteins into or out of a cell, the cell membrane folds around the substance to be transported, making a pocket to carry it in or out of the cell. • Endocytosis is a useful way for unicellular organisms or very simple multicellular organisms to get food into their internal environment. • Exocytosis helps cells remove waste materials and specific molecules into the external environment. 3.4 Passive and Active Transport 6

  25. How Cells Exchange Materials 3.4 Passive and Active Transport (cont.) Large molecules are transported into a cell by endocystosis (a), and out of a cell by exocytosis (b). Both processes require energy. 3.4 Passive and Active Transport 7

  26. End of Section 2

  27. Exchange in Multicellular Organisms 3.5 Gas Exchange in Water • Cellular respiration is an important supply of energy for metabolism and other cell activities in most organisms. Oxygen is essential for cellular respiration, and carbon dioxide is given off as a waste product. The correct balance of these two important molecules must be regulated carefully. 3.5 Gas Exchange in Water 1

  28. Exchange in Multicellular Organisms 3.5 Gas Exchange in Water (cont.) • Gas exchange happens by diffusion across a membrane when the gases are dissolved in water. As with most exchange processes, efficiency requires a large surface area relative to volume. In fish, breathing through gills is very efficient because they have a large surface area made up of many fine, threadlike filaments. 3.5 Gas Exchange in Water 2

  29. Exchange in Multicellular Organisms 3.5 Gas Exchange in Water (cont.) Fish gills are thin filaments supported by bony structures and richly supplied with blood vessels. Each filament is made of disks that contain numerous capillaries. Water flows past these disks in directions opposite (countercurrent) to the flow of blood through the capillaries. A covering over the gills, called the operculum, protects the delicate filaments. 3.5 Gas Exchange in Water 3

  30. Exchange in Multicellular Organisms 3.6 Adaptation to Life on Land (cont.) • Lungs are the organs of gas exchange in many land animals, including humans. Lungs minimize the effects of drying out by eliminating the one-way flow of oxygen that is so efficient in gills. Because the concentration difference is not great, the gas-exchange efficiency of lungs is much less than that of gills. 3.6 Adaptation to Life on Land 4

  31. Scanning electron micrograph of alveoli, x415. Capillaries in the alveolar walls provide a close relationship between blood and air. Exchange in Multicellular Organisms 3.6 Adaptation to Life on Land (cont.) • The air you breathe passes through your nose, where it is filtered by hairs lining the nasal cavities, moistened, and warmed. It then travels through branched passageways to reach millions of microscopic cavities in the lungs called alveoli. 3.6 Adaptation to Life on Land 5

  32. Exchange in Multicellular Organisms 3.6 Adaptation to Life on Land (cont.) 3.6 Adaptation to Life on Land 7

  33. Exchange in Multicellular Organisms 3.7 Waste Removal (cont.) • Metabolism produces toxic nitrogenous waste, such as ammonia (NH3), which must be disposed of. • The high solubility of ammonia makes it a safe excretory product in freshwater and saltwater protists and animals. • Mammals, some fishes, and amphibians excrete nitrogenous wastes chiefly as urea. • Uric acid, an almost insoluble and nontoxic form of nitrogenous waste, is an adaptation of birds and many desert reptiles. 3.7 Waste Removal 4

  34. End of Section 3

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