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1. PROBLEM – What about physical pressure? It is easy to say that water will move from high concentration to low concentration…but look at the cell to

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Page 1: 1. PROBLEM – What about physical pressure? It is easy to say that water will move from high concentration to low concentration…but look at the cell to

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Page 2: 1. PROBLEM – What about physical pressure? It is easy to say that water will move from high concentration to low concentration…but look at the cell to

PROBLEM – What about physical pressure?

It is easy to say that water will move from high concentration to low concentration…but look at the cell to the right…can the water keep going in?

NO, as water enters and the cytoplasm begins to put pressure on the cell wall, the cell wall will begin push back (3rd law of motion) – physical pressure.

The combined effects of solute concentrations and physical pressure are given in a single measurement called the WATER POTENTIAL (Ψ; psi) for a given solution (EACH SOLUTION IS ASSIGNED A WATER POTENTIAL).

physical pressure.

Page 3: 1. PROBLEM – What about physical pressure? It is easy to say that water will move from high concentration to low concentration…but look at the cell to

WATER POTENTIAL

Ψ = Ψs + Ψp

physical pressure.

Ψ = water potential of the given solution

2. Water always move from solutions of higher water potential (higher pressure) to solutions of lower water (lower pressure) of course.

How is water potential calculated?

1. The potential pressure, in Mpa, that the water will exert on another solution.

3. Water potential determines the direction of water movement

4. Largest water potential = 0 Mpa = DISTILLED WATERIt has the greatest available free water molecules greatest potential to move and do work greatest pressure potential to exert on another solution

Page 4: 1. PROBLEM – What about physical pressure? It is easy to say that water will move from high concentration to low concentration…but look at the cell to

WATER POTENTIAL

Ψ = Ψs + Ψp

physical pressure.

Ψ = water potential of the given solution

Ψs = solute potential (osmotic potential)

1. Ψs = defined as 0 MPa for pure water; it becomes more and more negative as more and more solute is added since the potential pressure the water would exert on a neighboring solution should less if the water concentration is falling.

How is water potential calculated?

2. Always either zero or negative

3. Makes sense since the more solute, the more likely you are to bring water to you and therefore the lower the potential pressure exerted by the water.

Page 5: 1. PROBLEM – What about physical pressure? It is easy to say that water will move from high concentration to low concentration…but look at the cell to

WATER POTENTIAL

Ψ = Ψs + Ψp

physical pressure.

Ψ = water potential of the given solution

Ψs = solute potential (osmotic potential)

How is water potential calculated?

Ψp = [physical] pressure potential

1. Ψp = potential pressure the water will apply on a neighboring solution due to physical forces

2. Ψp can be positive or negative since the physical pressure can be greater than atmospheric pressure (positive; i.e. in a turgid plant cell) or less than atmospheric pressure (negative; i.e. xylem cells when water is flowing through by transpiration).

Page 6: 1. PROBLEM – What about physical pressure? It is easy to say that water will move from high concentration to low concentration…but look at the cell to

Quantitative analysis of WATER POTENTIAL

Look at the four conditions on the right and explain what you are observing in terms of water potential.

Water is moving from higher water potential to lower water potential whose values are dependent on solute potential and pressure potential.

More solute - more negative Ψs

More pressure - increases Ψp

Less pressure - decreases Ψp

Page 7: 1. PROBLEM – What about physical pressure? It is easy to say that water will move from high concentration to low concentration…but look at the cell to

Quantitative analysis of WATER POTENTIAL

Look at the conditions on the right and explain what you are observing in terms of water potential.

The cell is at equilibrium when the cell wall pushes back with the equivalent pressure potential of 0.7 MPa

Page 8: 1. PROBLEM – What about physical pressure? It is easy to say that water will move from high concentration to low concentration…but look at the cell to

Quantitative analysis of WATER POTENTIAL1. A solution in a beaker has sucrose dissolved in water with a solute potential of -0.5MPa. A flaccid cell is placed in the above beaker with a solute potential of -0.9MPa.

a) What is the pressure potential of the flaccid cell before it was placed in the beaker?  b) What is the water potential of the cell before it was placed in the beaker?  c) What is the water potential in the beaker containing the sucrose?  d) How will the water move? e) What is the pressure potential of the plant cell when it is in equilibrium with the sucrose solution outside? Also, what is its final water potential when it is in equilibrium?   

f) Is the cell now turgid/flaccid/plasmolysed? 

g) Is the cell hypotonic or hypertonic with respect to the outside?

0 MPa since the cell wall applied no pressure if flaccid

Ψs + Ψp = Ψ -0.9 + 0 = -0.9MPa

Ψs + Ψp = Ψ -0.5 + 0 = -0.5MPa

From high to low water potential (from beaker to cell)

Equilibrium tells you that the water potential of both solutions must be the same. If the outer solution is -0.5MPa then the cytoplasm must also be -0.5MPa.

Ψ = Ψs + Ψp -0.5MPa = -0.9 MPa + Ψp

Ψp = 0.4, a positive number makes sense since the cytoplasm’s potential to apply pressure is increased if the cell wall is pushing on it.

turgid

It is still hypertonic since not much water would have entered before pressurizing the cell causing the membrane to push back.

Page 9: 1. PROBLEM – What about physical pressure? It is easy to say that water will move from high concentration to low concentration…but look at the cell to

Quantitative analysis of WATER POTENTIAL

 2. A solution in a beaker has sucrose dissolved in water with a solute potential of -0.7MPa. A flaccid cell is placed in the above beaker with a solute potential of -0.3MPa.

a) What is the pressure potential of the flaccid cell before it was placed in the beaker?  b) What is the water potential of the cell before it was placed in the beaker?  c) What is the water potential in the beaker containing the sucrose?  d) How will the water move? e) What is the pressure potential of the plant cell when it is in equilibrium with the sucrose solution outside? Think carefully – does the plant cell wall change shape?  f) Also, what is the cell’s final water potential when it is in equilibrium?   g) Is the cell now turgid/flaccid/plasmolysed?  h) What is the cell’s solute potential when it is in equilibrium?  I) Is the cell hypotonic or hypertonic with respect to the outside?  J) If it is hypo/hyper (choose one) tonic – this means that its water potential is higher/lower (choose one) than the outside.

0 MPa since the cell wall applied no pressure if flaccid

Ψs + Ψp = Ψ -0.3 + 0 = -0.3MPa

Ψs + Ψp = Ψ -0.7 + 0 = -0.7MPa

From high to low water potential (from the cell to the beaker)

Ψp = 0, the plant cell wall is not exerting pressure on the cytoplasm since water is moving from the cell into the beaker

Water potential of cell = water potential of beaker -0.7 MPa

plasmolysed

Ψ = Ψs + Ψp -0.7MPa = -0.7 MPa + 0MPa Water potential of cell = water potential of beaker

hypotonic hypotonic &higher

Page 10: 1. PROBLEM – What about physical pressure? It is easy to say that water will move from high concentration to low concentration…but look at the cell to

Review Questions:

Water will move out from hypo- to hypertonic

The cell will crenate.

Page 11: 1. PROBLEM – What about physical pressure? It is easy to say that water will move from high concentration to low concentration…but look at the cell to

Review Questions:

The solution is hypertonic as the solute concentration is higher making the water concentration lower than inside the cell.

Osmosis will take place since membrane is not permeable to sugar. Water will diffuse out of the cell causing it to crenate.

Page 12: 1. PROBLEM – What about physical pressure? It is easy to say that water will move from high concentration to low concentration…but look at the cell to
Page 13: 1. PROBLEM – What about physical pressure? It is easy to say that water will move from high concentration to low concentration…but look at the cell to

-24.8 bars

-4.9 bars

Ψs + Ψp = Ψ -24.8 bars + 0 = -24.8 bars

Into the cell: from high water potential to low water potential