1 / 25

Biology Review for the GHSGT

Biology Review for the GHSGT. The Cell Membrane and Cellular Transport. Solutions. A solution is a liquid mixture of solute dissolved in solvent Example: Salt water is a solution. Salt (the solute) Is dissolved in water (the solvent). Maintaining Homeostasis.

deepage
Download Presentation

Biology Review for the GHSGT

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. Biology Review for the GHSGT The Cell Membrane and Cellular Transport

  2. Solutions • A solution is a liquid mixture of solute dissolved in solvent • Example: Salt water is a solution. • Salt (the solute) • Is dissolved in water (the solvent)

  3. Maintaining Homeostasis • Keeping an ideal balance of solutes within the cell • Cytoplasm must keep it’s watery-jelly like substance (solvent) in the right balance with solutes such as salt and other minerals

  4. Hormones • Chemical messengers that regulate body functions • Maintain homeostasis • Movement of oxygen/carbon dioxide • Maintain internal temperature • Regulation of fluids across cell membrane

  5. Cell Membrane • Main Purpose: regulate the movement of materials into and out of the cell • Is semi-permeable (selectively permeable)- only certain substances can go through • Has a phospholipid bilayer

  6. Passive Transport • Molecules move spontaneously through the cell membrane from areas of higher concentration to areas of lower concentration. • Moves “with the concentration gradient” • Automatic, doesn’t not require energy • Three types: diffusion, facilitated diffusion, osmosis

  7. Diffusion • Diffusion - process by which substances move directly through the cell membrane • Facilitated diffusion- involves the help of carrier proteins • For molecules too large to fit between the phospholipids

  8. Osmosis • The movement of water from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration through a semi-permeable membrane • Essentially, osmosis is the diffusion of water • Can occur in either direction, depending on solution concentrations • Could be hypertonic, hypotonic, or isotonic

  9. Types of Solutions • Hypertonic- particle concentration is higher in the solution than in the cell. • Water goes out • Cell shrinks

  10. Types of Solutions • Hypotonic – particle concentration is lower in solution than in the cell • Water goes into cell • Cell swells

  11. Types of Solutions • Isotonic- particle concentration is the same outside and inside the cell • Same amount of water goes in as goes out

  12. Types of Solutions

  13. Activity – What will be the effect on the cell? • 1. Internal cellular solution concentration of 11.4 mg/L placed in a solution with 9.9 mg/L. • 2. Internal cellular solution concentration of 1.1 mg/L placed in a solution with 4.4 mg/L.

  14. Activity – What will be the effect on the cell? • 3. Internal cellular solution concentration of 0.01 mg/L placed in a solution with 0.1 mg/L. • 4. Internal cellular solution concentration of 6.81 mg/L placed in a solution with 6.69 mg/L. • 5. Internal cellular solution of 8.03 mg/L placed in a solution with 2.21 mg/L.

  15. Active Transport • For movement against the concentration gradient (low to high) • Requires energy • Movement is characterized by it’s direction • exocytosis or • endocytosis

  16. Exocytosis • Removes materials from the cell • Waste materials, proteins, and fats • Uses a storage sac to move materials toward membrane, membrane opens up, and materials are expelled out from the cell

  17. Endocytosis • Brings materials into the cell without passing through the cell membrane • The membrane folds itself around the substance, creating a vesicle, and brings the substance into the cell • How Amoebas eat

  18. Fill in the Blank • 1. A cell which has no net gain or loss of water is in a(n) __________ solution. • 2. The process of expending energy to move molecules across a membrane is __________ transport. • 3. A plant cell that has swelled to its limits is referred to as a ________ solution; a shrunken plant cell is a __________solution.

  19. Choose the best answer • 1. the movement of substance into and out of a cell without the use of energy is called: • A. active transport • B. passive transport • C. exocytosis • D. endocytosis

  20. Choose the best answer • 2. The movement of water across a semi-permeable membrane from an area of high water concentration to an area of low water concentration is called: • A. active transport • B. diffusion • C. osmosis • D. hypotonic

  21. Choose the best answer • 3. A type of membrane which allows only certain molecules to pass through is called: • A. permeable • B. semi-permeable • C. active • D. porous

  22. Choose the best answer • 4. A cell placed in a solution shrinks by the process of osmosis. What kind of solution is outside the cell? • A. hypotonic • B. hypertonic • C. active • D. isotonic

  23. Choose the best answer • 5. If the solution surrounding a cell has a lower concentration of solutes than inside the cell, water will move into the cell through osmosis, causing it to expand. What kind of solution is surrounding the cell? • A. active • B. passive • C. hypertonic • D. hypotonic

  24. Short Answer • 6. How does active transport differ from diffusion? • 7. Dried beans are soaked overnight in preparation for cooking. Explain the process affecting the beans. What will happen to the dried beans? • 8. Describe the difference between exocytosis and endocytosis. • 9. A celery stalk is placed in a solution. It begins to wilt. What is a likely component of that solution?

  25. From American Book Company’s Passing the High School Graduation Test in Science • by Liz Thompson and Michelle Gunter

More Related