20
Cellular Transport Notes

Cellular Transport Notes · What is the purpose of cellular transport? •Homeostasis depends upon appropriate movement of materials across the cell membrane. –Required materials

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    2

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Cellular Transport Notes · What is the purpose of cellular transport? •Homeostasis depends upon appropriate movement of materials across the cell membrane. –Required materials

Cellular Transport

Notes

Page 2: Cellular Transport Notes · What is the purpose of cellular transport? •Homeostasis depends upon appropriate movement of materials across the cell membrane. –Required materials

About Cell Membranes

• All cells have a cell membrane

• Functions:

a. Controls what enters and exits the cell to maintain an internal balance called homeostasis

b. Provides protection and support for the cell

TEM picture of a real

cell membrane.

Page 3: Cellular Transport Notes · What is the purpose of cellular transport? •Homeostasis depends upon appropriate movement of materials across the cell membrane. –Required materials

What is the purpose of cellular transport?

• Homeostasis depends upon appropriate movement of materials across the cell membrane.

– Required materials must pass into the cells so they can be utilized.

• Ex. Oxygen and glucose for cellular respiration

– Waste materials must pass out of the cells as they are produced

• Ex. The CO2 produced as a waste product of cellular respiration

• The cell membrane regulates the passage of materials into and out of the cell.

– Needed materials move in

– Excess materials move out

Page 4: Cellular Transport Notes · What is the purpose of cellular transport? •Homeostasis depends upon appropriate movement of materials across the cell membrane. –Required materials

How?

• Each individual cell exists in a fluid environment, and

the cytoplasm within the cell also has a fluid

environment. The presence of a liquid makes it

possible for substances (such as nutrients, oxygen,

and waste products) to move into and out of the cell.

• A cell membrane is semipermeable (selectively

permeable), meaning that some substances can pass

directly through the cell membrane while other

substances can not.

• Materials can enter or exit through the cell membrane

by passive transport or active transport.

Membrane

movement

animation

Page 5: Cellular Transport Notes · What is the purpose of cellular transport? •Homeostasis depends upon appropriate movement of materials across the cell membrane. –Required materials

Types of Cellular Transport

• Passive Transport

cell doesn’t use energy

1. Diffusion

2. Facilitated Diffusion

3. Osmosis

• Active Transport

cell does use energy

1. Protein Pumps

2. Endocytosis

3. Exocytosis

high

low

This is

gonna be

hard

work!!

high

low

Weeee!!!

•Animations of Active

Transport & Passive

Transport

Page 6: Cellular Transport Notes · What is the purpose of cellular transport? •Homeostasis depends upon appropriate movement of materials across the cell membrane. –Required materials

Passive Transport • cell uses no energy

• molecules move randomly

• The random motion of molecules occurs

along the concentration gradient meaning

molecules spread out from an area of high

concentration to an area of low

concentration.

• (HighLow) • Three types:

Page 7: Cellular Transport Notes · What is the purpose of cellular transport? •Homeostasis depends upon appropriate movement of materials across the cell membrane. –Required materials

3 Types of Passive Transport

1. Diffusion – is the spreading out of molecules

across a cell membrane until they are equally

concentrated.

2. Facilitative Diffusion – diffusion with the help

of transport proteins

3. Osmosis – diffusion of water

Page 8: Cellular Transport Notes · What is the purpose of cellular transport? •Homeostasis depends upon appropriate movement of materials across the cell membrane. –Required materials

Passive Transport:

1. Diffusion

• Diffusion: random movement of particles from

an area of high concentration to an area of

low concentration.

• Diffusion continues until all molecules are evenly

spaced (equilibrium is reached)-Note: molecules will

still move around but stay spread out.

Simple Diffusion

Animation

Page 9: Cellular Transport Notes · What is the purpose of cellular transport? •Homeostasis depends upon appropriate movement of materials across the cell membrane. –Required materials

• Facilitated diffusion: diffusion of specific particles along the concentration gradient (High Low) with the help of transport proteins found in the membrane

a. Transport Proteins are specific – they “select” only certain molecules to cross the membrane

b. Transports larger or charged molecules that cannot pass through the membrane on their own

c. Glucose is an example of a molecule that passes into the cell through facilitated diffusion

Facilitated

diffusion (Channel

Protein)

Simple

Diffusion

(Lipid

Bilayer)

Passive Transport:

2. Facilitated Diffusion

Carrier Protein

A B

• http://bio.winona.edu/berg/Free.htm

Page 10: Cellular Transport Notes · What is the purpose of cellular transport? •Homeostasis depends upon appropriate movement of materials across the cell membrane. –Required materials

High Concentration

Low Concentration

Cell Membrane

Glucose molecules

Protein channel

Passive Transport: 2. Facilitated Diffusion

Go to

Section:

Transport

Protein Through a

Cellular Transport From a- High

Low

• Channel Proteins

animations

Page 11: Cellular Transport Notes · What is the purpose of cellular transport? •Homeostasis depends upon appropriate movement of materials across the cell membrane. –Required materials

• Osmosis: diffusion of water

through a selectively permeable

membrane

• Water moves from a high

concentration of water to a low

concentration of water

• Because water is so small and in

such abundance, the cell

cannot control its movement

through the cell membrane.

Osmosis

animation

Passive Transport:

3. Osmosis

Page 12: Cellular Transport Notes · What is the purpose of cellular transport? •Homeostasis depends upon appropriate movement of materials across the cell membrane. –Required materials

Effects of Osmosis on Life

• Water moves freely

through pores.

• Solute (green) too large

to move across.

• Reminder:

– Solute: what is being dissolved

– Solvent: what dissolves the solute

• In salt water, the solute is the salt and the solvent is the

water

Page 13: Cellular Transport Notes · What is the purpose of cellular transport? •Homeostasis depends upon appropriate movement of materials across the cell membrane. –Required materials

Hypotonic Solution

Hypotonic: The solution has a lower concentration of

solutes and a higher concentration of water than inside the

cell. (Low solute; High water)

Result: Water moves from the solution to inside the cell): Cell

Swells and bursts open (lyse)!

• Osmosis Animations for isotonic,

hypertonic, and hypotonic solutions

Page 14: Cellular Transport Notes · What is the purpose of cellular transport? •Homeostasis depends upon appropriate movement of materials across the cell membrane. –Required materials

Hypertonic Solution

Hypertonic: The solution has a higher concentration of

solutes and a lower concentration of water than inside the

cell. (High solute; Low water)

Result: Water moves out of the cell into the solution:

Cell shrivels!

• Osmosis Animations for isotonic,

hypertonic, and hypotonic solutions

shrinks

Page 15: Cellular Transport Notes · What is the purpose of cellular transport? •Homeostasis depends upon appropriate movement of materials across the cell membrane. –Required materials

Isotonic Solution

Isotonic: The concentration of solutes in the solution is

equal to the concentration of solutes inside the cell.

Result: Water moves equally in both directions and the cell

remains same size! (Dynamic Equilibrium)

• Osmosis Animations for isotonic,

hypertonic, and hypotonic solutions

Page 16: Cellular Transport Notes · What is the purpose of cellular transport? •Homeostasis depends upon appropriate movement of materials across the cell membrane. –Required materials

In what type of solution are these cells?

A C B

Hypertonic Isotonic Hypotonic

Page 17: Cellular Transport Notes · What is the purpose of cellular transport? •Homeostasis depends upon appropriate movement of materials across the cell membrane. –Required materials

Active Transport

• Requires the cell to use energy

• Actively moves molecules to where they are

needed

• Molecules move against the concentration

gradient - from an area of low concentration

to an area of high concentration

• (Low High)

• Three Types:

Page 18: Cellular Transport Notes · What is the purpose of cellular transport? •Homeostasis depends upon appropriate movement of materials across the cell membrane. –Required materials

Types of Active Transport

1. Protein Pumps -

transport proteins that

require energy to do work

• Example: Sodium /

Potassium Pumps are

important in nerve

responses.

Sodium Potassium

Pumps (Active

Transport using

proteins)

Protein changes

shape to move

molecules: this

requires energy!

Page 19: Cellular Transport Notes · What is the purpose of cellular transport? •Homeostasis depends upon appropriate movement of materials across the cell membrane. –Required materials

Types of Active Transport

• 2. Endocytosis: taking bulky

material into a cell by forming a vesicle

• Uses energy

• Cell membrane in-folds around food particle

• “cell eating”

• forms food vacuole & digests food

• This is how white blood cells eat bacteria!

Page 20: Cellular Transport Notes · What is the purpose of cellular transport? •Homeostasis depends upon appropriate movement of materials across the cell membrane. –Required materials

Types of Active Transport

3. Exocytosis: Forces material out of cell in bulk

• Membrane surrounding the material fuses with cell membrane

• Cell changes shape – requires energy

• Ex: Hormones or wastes released from cell

Endocytosis &

Exocytosis

animations