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CELL TRANSPORT CELL TRANSPORT

CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

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Page 1: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

CELL TRANSPORTCELL TRANSPORT

Page 2: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

How is a cell like .. a How is a cell like .. a cell?cell?

Page 3: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Both kinds of cells are designed to:

•Create compartments.

•Keep certain things inside the cell.

•Keep certain things from entering the cell.

•Control what gets in and out.

Page 4: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Let’s review Let’s review some some

terminology terminology from general from general

biology.biology.

Page 5: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Terms

• Solvent Solvent

• Solute Solute

• GradientGradient

• HydrophobicHydrophobic

• Diffusion Diffusion

• Osmosis Osmosis

Page 6: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

• Solute – what is dissolved

• Solvent – what does the dissolving.

• What is the solute in saline (NaCl) solution?

• What is the solvent in a sugar water solution?

Page 7: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Gradient means difference.

• A concentration gradient is a difference in concentration of solutes across a membrane.

• If a substance can cross a membrane, it crosses from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration. We say that the substance travels “down its concentration gradient.”

Page 8: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

One of the functions of the cell and membrane-bound organelles is to create and

maintain gradientsgradients.

Page 9: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

For example, mitochondria create

and maintain a concentration

difference in H+ (acidity) between the matrixmatrix and the intermembrane intermembrane

spacespace.

Page 10: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

In fact, the HH++ gradient created inside mitochondria is used in making ATP.

Take AP biology is you want the details…

Page 11: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Organelles form and maintain concentration gradients concentration gradients

(differences) of many substances.

Page 12: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain
Page 13: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

The cell membrane acts as a barrier. The cell membrane acts as a barrier. Membrane phospholipids form a Membrane phospholipids form a

hydrophobichydrophobic “wall.” “wall.”

Page 14: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Some substances that can’t cross the membrane. Some substances that can’t cross the membrane.

• Ions (Na+, K+, Cl-)

• Amino acids

• Sugars

• Large peptides and proteins, including peptide hormones like insulin.

Page 15: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Think. Think. If the cell membrane is hydrophobic how can water diffuse across it so easily?

Page 16: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

A special note about A special note about waterwater

•The cell membrane poses a “hydrophobic” barrier to water.

•But water can cross cell membranes easily by diffusion.

•This is because special water “channels” called aquaporins aquaporins enable water to cross an otherwise impermeable barrier.

Page 17: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

AquaporinsAquaporins are water channels. They allow water to freely enter and leave the

cell. One aquaporin aquaporin protein

molecule. Each one has four pores that

allow water to pass – but not ions and most

other solutes.

Page 18: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

AquaporinsAquaporins are tiny proteins imbedded in the cell membrane – they are integral proteins. These pores allow waterwater to

diffuse down its concentration gradient.

Page 19: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

DiffusionDiffusion• Diffusion is the effect of random motion random motion of

molecules in a fluid (liquid or gas.)

• It is a spontaneousspontaneous process. It is not “guided” or controlled. It happens on its own. It is energizedenergized by molecular motion.

• A short video showing diffusion of a dye in water.

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-5242394503257451479

Page 20: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

More diffusion stuffMore diffusion stuff

• The end-result of complete diffusion is a uniform composition uniform composition in the fluid.

• The net movement of diffusing particles is from a higher concentration to a lower a higher concentration to a lower concentration concentration until equilibriumequilibrium is reached. At equilibrium, the concentration of diffusing particles will be the same throughout the container.

Page 21: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Perfume diffuses from an area of high concentration (in the bottle) into the surrounding air. In a closed room, diffusion would continue until equilibriumequilibrium is reached – the distribution of perfume molecules is uniformuniform throughout the entire room.

Page 22: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

DiffusionDiffusion occurs in fluid fluid matter – gases and

liquids.

Page 23: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

A model of some of the possible paths a single sugar molecule in water might

take.

Page 24: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Diffusion is powered by the kinetic energy of molecules in a fluid --

random molecular motion.

Page 25: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

ImpermeableImpermeable

A membrane is impermeable impermeable to a substance if that substance cannot

cross the membrane. Membranes may be permeable to some substances and

impermeable to others.

Page 26: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

The French word for

raincoat is impermeablimpermeabl

ee. Why does this

make sense?

Page 27: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Boat Boat – impermeable to water?

HuntersHunters – impermeable to reason?

Page 28: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Selectively permeable membranesSelectively permeable membranes

• Allow some substances to cross more easily than others.

• This membrane is permeable to but impermeable to .

Page 29: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Sorry, folks. I detest the word semipermeable. The better term is

selectively permeable.

Why?

1. “Semi” means half. Which half?

2. Membranes are selectively permeable; they allow certain substances to pass, not others.

Page 30: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

… and all membranes are permeable to

semis!

Page 31: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Think.• Do you have to have a

membrane to have diffusion?

• Do you have to have a membrane to have osmosis?

• Can Na+ undergo osmosis?

Page 32: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Cells compartmentalize water and solutes and move them around.

The two basic types of transport:

• 1. passive transportpassive transport – does not require special energy input from the cell membrane. Relies on diffusion.

• 2. active transportactive transport – requires energy input from the cell membrane. A “pump.”

Page 33: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Diffusion across a membrane

Page 34: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

• NOTE: DiffusionDiffusion is random molecular motion powered by the kinetic energy in molecules. You do not have to have a membrane to have diffusion.

• OsmosisOsmosis, on the other hand, is diffusion of water across a selectively permeable membrane. By definition, you have to have a membrane in order to have diffusion.

Page 35: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Active transport

• Movement of molecule X against (“up”) against (“up”) its concentration gradientits concentration gradient – from low concentration of X to a higher concentration of X.

• This requires an input of energy. That energy is usually derived from ATP → ADP + Pi.

• We call the proteins on the cell membrane that carry out active transport pumps. pumps.

Page 36: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Why “pump”?Why “pump”?

A bicycle pump moves air from an area of low air concentration to an area of higher air concentration. It requires

energy input to make the pump work.

Page 37: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Cell pumps do the same.Cell pumps do the same.This happens in the kidney.

Active transporter pumps are proteins embedded in cell membranes. They are highly specific. There are Na+ pumps, H+

pumps, and Cl- pumps.

Page 38: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

In kidney tubules, water diffuses from high water concentration to lower water concentration. Na+ ion is pumped from low [Na+] to higher [Na+].

Page 39: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

• This lady from This lady from Nigeria is using a Nigeria is using a hand pump to obtain hand pump to obtain clear water. But in clear water. But in order for the pump order for the pump to work, she must to work, she must work! work!

• The energy provided The energy provided by her arms moves by her arms moves water “uphill.” water “uphill.”

Page 40: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

An example: the Hthe H++ pump pump

Your stomach is very acidic. It has a high [H+]. The cells in the lining of your

stomach that make the acid have low [H+].

Page 41: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

The HH++ pump pump in the stomach lining

The cells that secrete H+ into your stomach are working “up” a concentration gradient – from

low [H+] in the cell to high [H+] in the stomach.

Page 42: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

The HH++ pump pump in the stomach lining

Since we are pumping H+ “up” a concentration gradient, this requires cell work. So the pump in

the membrane is an ATPaseATPase. It breaks down ATP into ADP. This is the energy source for the pump.

Page 43: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Nexium® – the “little purple pill” is a PROTON PUMP INHIBITOR. It inhibits

secretion of H+ into the stomach.

Page 44: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

ThinkThink The interior (cytoplasm) of the cell has a high concentration of KK++. . The exterior (intercellular fluid) of the cell has a much lower concentration of KK++ ion. KK++ exitsexits the cell by:

A. active transport

B. diffusion

C. chance

Page 45: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

ThinkThink The interior (cytoplasm) of the cell has a high concentration of KK++. . The exterior (intercellular fluid) of the cell has a much lower concentration of KK++ ion. KK++ entersenters the cell by:

A. active transport

B. diffusion

C. chance

Page 46: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Which of these diagrams shows activeactive transport?

Which show passive passive transport?

Page 47: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

The NaNa++--KK++ pump pump will be important when we talk about transmission of nerve impulses.

Page 48: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

• Na+-K+ ATPase pump actively transports K+ into the cell and Na+ out of the cell.

• The pump protein also functions as an ATPase enzyme that breaks down ATP to release energy to run the pump.

Page 49: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

• Na+-K+ ATPase pump actively transports K+ into the cell and Na+ out of the cell.

• But notice that it pumps in only two K+ for every three Na+ that it expels from the cell. This creates a permanent negative polarity to the inner membrane of the cell.

Page 50: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

An animation showing the action of the NaNa++--KK+ + ATPase pump ATPase pump protein in the cell membrane.

Page 51: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Cell transport can be classified as either uniport, symport, or

antiport.

Page 52: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

OxygenOxygen isn’t pumped in cells. isn’t pumped in cells. OO22 diffuses “down diffuses “down

its concentration gradient” – from an area of high its concentration gradient” – from an area of high OO22 concentration to an area of lower O concentration to an area of lower O22

concentration. concentration.

Page 53: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Facilitated diffusion

We said that ions and large compounds can’t cross the membrane. They have to use a protein gate or channel to enter the cell. If a substance is traveling “down” its

concentration gradient, no special cell work is needed. It just diffuses – through

the gate.

Page 54: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Glucose is polar. It cannot diffuse through the membrane.

Glucose requires a special transporter protein to enter the cell. Therefore, glucose enters

the cell by facilitated diffusion. The hormone insulininsulin is part of the glucose transporter.

This is an example of facilitated diffusion.

Page 55: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Great words to live by…

Osmosis is the diffusion of water

across a selectively-permeable membrane.

Page 56: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Osmosis

Water diffuses from an area of high water concentration to an area of lower water concentration.

Page 57: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Osmosis – diffusion of water

Page 58: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

• This membrane is not permeable to glucose; glucose can’t cross.

• The membrane is permeable to water.

• Which direction will the water flow?

Page 59: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Osmosis can generate a lot of force! (force/area = pressure)

But the source of energy for osmosis is the kinetic energy generated by random molecular motion in a fluid.

Page 60: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Osmotic pressure in roots can

be so great that it can break up

sidewalks!

Page 61: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

If you need more review, try this animation.

http://www.tvdsb.on.ca/westmin/science/sbi3a1/Cells/Osmosis.htm

Page 62: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Osmosis – flow of water across a selectively permeable membrane.

… and things always diffuse from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration.

Page 63: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

What is the source of energy that powers diffusion of gases and

liquids?

Page 64: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

TermsTerms

•HypertonicHypertonic

• Isotonic Isotonic

•HypotonicHypotonic

Page 65: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

What’s the concentration of water in a 0.9% saline (NaCl) solution?

If it’s 0.9% salt, it must be 99.1% water!

Page 66: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Think: Think: On the left side of a membrane permeable only to water, we have pure water. On the right side of the membrane, there is a 0.9% saline (salt) solution.

• A. Which side has the highest concentration of salt?

• B. Which side has the highest concentration of water?

• C. Which way will the water diffuse?

Pure water 0.9% salt solution

Page 67: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Hypertonic, isotonic, or hypotonic?

They’re relative terms.

• If two solutions are isotonic to one another, the concentration of water and non-diffusible solutes in both are the same.

• If solution A is hypertonic to solution B, solution A has a higher concentration of non-diffusible solute (and a lower concentration of water) than B.

• If solution A is hypotonic to solution B, solution A has a lower concentration of non-diffusible solute (and a higher concentration of water) than B.

Page 68: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Hypertonic or hypotonic?• Solution A: 100% water

• Solution B: 95% water, 5% glucose

• Solution C: 90% water, 10% glucose

Solution AA is __ to solution BB. Solution BB is __ to solution AA.

Solution AA is __ to solution CC. Solution CC is __ to solution AA.

Solution BB is __ to solution CC. Solution CC is __ to solution BB.

Page 69: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Net movement of water in and out of the cell by osmosis depends on the

concentration of solution it is in.

Page 70: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain
Page 71: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

A nurse errs by giving a patient pure water in an IV. The patient has to undergo kidney dialysis because:

• A. the patient’s RBCs shrunk.

• B. the patient’s RBCs ruptured.

• C. the patient developed an allergy to water.

Page 72: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Osmosis: a quick-and-dirty summaryOsmosis: a quick-and-dirty summary

• Hypertonic solutions “draw” water out of hypotonic environments by osmosis.

• Cells take on water and swell when placed in a hypotonic environment (unless they have active transport “pump” mechanisms to counteract this effect).

• We are assuming that the solute (Na+, glucose, etc.) is unable to diffuse across the membrane, but that water can cross the membrane.

Page 73: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

“Water, water everywhere, but not a drop to drink.” Why?

Actually, Coleridge says in the Rime of the Ancient Mariner “Water, water everywhere, nor any drop to drink.”

Page 74: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Exocytosis and endocytosis

Page 75: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

ExocytosisExocytosis of a cell product (usually a protein like a hormone or enzyme). The product is enclosed in a membrane-bound vesicle. The vesicle fuses with the cell membrane and the product is expelled.

Page 76: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain
Page 77: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

EndocytosisEndocytosis

• PhagocytosisPhagocytosis – engulfing of particulate matter (bacteria, fungal spores, dust particles, etc.) into a cell. The engulfed material is often degraded by lytic enzymes in lysosomes. “Cell eating”

• PinocytosisPinocytosis – consumption of liquids by the cell. “Cell drinking”

Page 78: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Phagocytosis of a bacterium by a WBC – a form of

endocytosis.

Page 79: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Phagocytosis – engulfing of a particulate solid particulate solid into the cell

Page 80: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Pinocytosis – engulfing of a liquid into the cell.

Page 81: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

REVIEW

Page 82: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain
Page 83: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

• Osmosis is the ____ of ____ across a ______ ______ membrane.

• What is the energy source for diffusion?

• How does facilitated diffusion differ from “simple” diffusion?

• Another word for gradient is ____.

Page 84: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

• Diagram A shows simple ________, a passive process. K+ is flowing “down” its gradient from high [K+] in the cell to low [K+] in the extracellular fluid.

• Diagram B shows an example of _____ transport – the Na+-K+ ATPase “pump.”

Page 85: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Is this facilitated diffusion or active transport? How do you know?

Page 86: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

What What bulk transport bulk transport process is shown process is shown here? here? (The purple spheres represent water.)

Page 87: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain

Artist’s conception of aquaporin aquaporin proteins in a cell membrane.

Page 88: CELL TRANSPORT. How is a cell like.. a cell? Both kinds of cells are designed to: Create compartments. Keep certain things inside the cell. Keep certain