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Membrane Transport. Plasma membrane is selectively permeableImpermeable membrane - membrane though which nothing can passFreely permeable membrane - any substance can pass through itSelectively permeable membrane - permits free passage of some materials and restricts passage of othersDistinction
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1. Transport Processes AP 151
2. Membrane Transport Plasma membrane is selectively permeable
Impermeable membrane - membrane though which nothing can pass
Freely permeable membrane - any substance can pass through it
Selectively permeable membrane - permits free passage of some materials and restricts passage of others
Distinction may be based on size, electrical charge, molecular shape, lipid solubility
Cells differ in their permeabilities; depending on
what lipids and proteins are present in the membrane and
how these components are arranged.
4. Types of Transport Processes Diffusion
results from random motion of particles (ions, molec.)
is a passive process
Carrier-mediated transport
Requires the presence of specialized integral proteins
Can be passive or active
Vesicular transport
Movment of materials with small membranous sacs, or vesicles
Always an active process
5. Membrane Permeability Diffusion through lipid bilayer
Nonpolar, hydrophobic substances diffuse through lipid layer; these are “lipid soluble” or lipophilic (fat-loving) substances
Diffusion through channel proteins
water and charged hydrophilic solutes diffuse through channel proteins; these are lipid insoluble or lipophobic (fat fearing) substances
Cells control permeability by regulating number of channel proteins
6. Simple Diffusion Net movement of particles from area of high concentration to area of low concentration
due to their constant, random motion
Difference between the high and low concentrations is a concentration gradient
Diffusion tends to eliminate the gradient
Also known as movement “down the concentra- tion gradient”
7. Diffusion Examples:
Scent of fresh flowers, drop of ink coloring a glass of water, movement of oxygen and CO2 through cell membranes
Simple diffusion – nonpolar and lipid-soluble substances
Diffuse directly through the lipid bilayer
Diffuse through channel proteins
8. Factors that Influence Diffusion Rates Distance -
The shorter the distance, the more quickly [ ] gradients are eliminated
Few cells are father than 125 microns from a blood vessel
Molecular Size
Ions and small molecules diffuse more rapidly
Temperature -
? temp., ? motion of particles
Steepness of concentrated gradient -
The larger the [ ] gradient, the faster diffusion proceeds
Membrane surface area -
The larger the area, the faster diffusion proceed
9. Diffusion Across Membranes Simple Diffusion
Lipophilic substances can enter cells easily because they diffuse through the lipid portion of the membrane
Examples are fatty acids, steroids, alcohol, oxygen, carbon dioxide, and urea,
Channel-Mediated Diffusion
Membrane channels are transmembrane proteins
Only 0.8 nm in diameter
Used by ions, very small water-soluble compounds
Much more complex than simple diffusion
Are there enough channels available?
Size and charge of the ion affects which channels it can pass through
10. Diffusion Through the Plasma Membrane
11. Effect of Membrane Permeability on Diffusion
12. Osmosis: A Special Case of Diffusion Each solute in the intra- and extracellular fluids diffuses as if it were the only material in solution.
From more to less, i.e., down the [ ] gradient
Some into the cytosol, others out of the cytosol
Yet, total concentration of ions and molecules on either side of the membrane stays the same
This equilibrium persists because a typical cell membrane is freely permeable to water.
Whenever a solute concentration gradient exist, a concentration gradient for water also exists.
Thus, the higher the solute concentration, the lower the water concentration.
13. Osmosis - By Definition Movement of water
Across a selectively permeable membrane
Down its concentration gradient (from high to low concentration)
Toward the solution containing the higher solute concentration
This solution has a lower water concentration
Continues until water concentrations and solute concen-trations are the same on either side of the membrane
14. Effect of Membrane Permeability on Diffusion and Osmosis
15. Osmolarity and Tonicity Mole - the gram molecular weight of a substance
1 mole of Glucose =180; 1 mole of NaCl = 58.5
Molarity - the number of moles of solute per liter of solution
1.0 M glucose contains 180 g/L; 1.0 M NaCl contains 58.5 g/L
Most body fluids are less concentrated than 1 M; use mM (millimolar) or µM (micromolar) concentrations --10-3 and 10-6, respectively.
Osmolarity = the total solute concentration in an aqueous solution
Osmolarity = molarity (mol/L) x # of particles in solutions
A 1 M Glucose solution = 1 Osmolar (Osm)
But a 1 M NaCl soln = 2 Osmolar because NaCl dissociates into 2 particles (Na and Cl) whereas Glucose does not
A 1 M MgCl2 solution = what osmolarity???? __________
Physiological solutions are expressed in milliosmoles per liter (mOsm/L)
blood plasma = 300 mOsm/L or 0.3 Osm/L
16. Tonicity Tonicity - ability of a solution to affect fluid volume and pressure within a cell
depends on concentration and permeability of solute
Isotonic solution
solution with the same solute concentration as that of the cytosol; normal saline
Hypotonic solution
lower concentration of nonpermeating solutes than that of the cytosol (high water concentration)
cells absorb water, swell and may burst (lyse)
Hypertonic solution
has higher concentration of nonpermeating solutes than that of the cytosol (low water concentration)
cells lose water + shrivel (crenate)
17. Osmosis and Cells Important because large volume changes caused by water movement disrupt normal cell function
Cell shrinkage or swelling
Isotonic: cell neither shrinks nor swells
Hypertonic: cell shrinks (crenation)
Hypotonic: cell swells (lysis)
18. Effects of Tonicity on RBCs
19. Filtration Cell membrane works like a sieve
Depends on pressure difference on either side of a partition
Moves from side of greater pressure to lower
Water and small molecules move through the pores of the membrane while large molecules don’t.
Example: urine formation in the kidneys.
20. Carrier Mediated Transport Many molecules cannot enter or leave cell by diffusion
CMT utilizes proteins to carry solutes across cell membrane
Characteristics of mediated transport:
Specificity - each transport protein binds to and transports only a single type of molecule or ion
Competition - results from similar molecules binding to the same protein.
Saturation - rate of movement of molecules is limited by the number of available transport proteins
21. Membrane Carriers Uniporter
carries only one solute at a time
Symport
carries 2 or more solutes simultaneously in same direction (cotransport)
Antiport
carries 2 or more solutes in opposite directions (countertransport)
sodium-potassium pump brings in K+ and removes Na+ from cell
Any carrier type can use either facilitated diffusion or active transport
22. Saturation of a Carrier Protein When the concentration of x molecules outside the cell is low, the transport rate is low because it is limited by the number of molecules available to be transported.
When more molecules are present outside the cell, as long as enough carrier proteins are available, more molecules can be transported; thus, the transport rate increases.
The transport rate is limited by the number of carrier proteins and the rate at which each carrier protein can transport solutes. When the number of molecules outside the cell is so large that the carrier proteins are all occupied, the system is saturated and the transport rate cannot increase.
23. CMT: Facilitated Diffusion Glucose and amino acids are insoluble in lipids and too large to fit through membrane channels
Passive process, i.e. no ATP used
Solute binds to receptor on carrier protein
Latter changes shape then releases solute on other side of membrane
Substance moved down its concentration gradient
24. CMT: Active Transport Uses ATP to move solutes across a membrane
It is not dependent on a [ ] gradient
Can move substances against their [ ] gradients - i.e. from lower to higher concentrations! Wow!
Allows for greater accumulation of a substance on one side of the membrane than on the other.
Carrier proteins utilized called ion or exchange pumps.
Ion pumps: actively transport Na+, K+, Ca++, Cl-
Exchange pumps: Na+-K+ pump
25. Types of Active Transport
26. Sodium-Potassium Pump
27. Functions of Na+ -K+ Pump Regulation of cell volume
“fixed anions” attract cations causing osmosis
cell swelling stimulates the Na+- K+ pump to ? ion concentration, ? osmolarity and cell swelling
Heat production (thyroid hormone increase # of pumps; heat a by-product)
Maintenance of a membrane potential in all cells
pump keeps inside negative, outside positive
Secondary active transport (No ATP used)
steep concentration gradient of Na+ and K+ maintained across the cell membrane
carriers move Na+ with 2nd solute easily into cell
SGLT saves glucose in kidney
28. Secondary Active Transport Ions or molecules move in same (symport) or different (antiport) direction.
Is the movement of glucose a symporter example or an antiporter example?
This example shows cotransport of Na+ and glucose.
A sodium-potassium exchange pump maintains a concentration of Na that is higher outside the cell than inside. Active transport.
Na moves back into the cell by a carrier protein that also moves glucose. The concentration gradient for Na provides the energy required to move glucose against its concentration gradient.
29. Vesicular Transport Transport large particles or fluid droplets through membrane in vesicles
uses ATP
Exocytosis –transport out of cell
Endocytosis –transport into cell
phagocytosis – engulfing large particles
pinocytosis – taking in fluid droplets
receptor mediated endocytosis – taking in specific molecules bound to receptors
30. Vesicular TransportEndocytosis Packaging of extracellular materials in vesicles at the cell surface
Involves relatively large volumes of extracellular material
Requires energy in the form of ATP
Three major types
Receptor-mediated endocytosis
Pinocytosis
Phagocytosis
31. Receptor Mediated Endocytosis A selective process
Involves formation of vesicles at surface of membrane
Vesicles contain receptors on their membrane
Vesicles contain specific target molecule in high concentration
Clathrin-coated vesicle in cytoplasm
uptake of LDL from bloodstream
If receptors are lacking, LDL’s accumulate and hypercholesterolemia develops
32. Receptor Mediated Endocytosis
33. Vesicular TransportPinocytosis or “Cell-Drinking” Taking in droplets of ECF
occurs in all human cells
Not as selective as ‘receptor-mediated endocytosis’
Membrane caves in, then pinches off into the cytoplasm as pinocytotic vesicle
34. Vesicular TransportPhagocytosis or “Cell-Eating”
35. Vesicular Transport: Exocytosis Secreting material or replacement of plasma membrane
36. Passive Membrane Transport – Review -
37. Active Membrane Transport – Review