1 / 17

The Plasma Membrane and Homeostasis

The Plasma Membrane and Homeostasis. Homeostasis – Maintaining a Balance. Cells must keep the proper concentration of nutrients and water and eliminate wastes. The plasma membrane is selectively permeable – it will allow some things to pass through, while blocking other things.

sonyaw
Download Presentation

The Plasma Membrane and Homeostasis

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. The Plasma Membrane and Homeostasis

  2. Homeostasis – Maintaining a Balance • Cells must keep the proper concentration of nutrients and water and eliminate wastes. • The plasma membrane is selectively permeable – it will allow some things to pass through, while blocking other things.

  3. Structure of the Plasma Membrane • Lipid bilayer – two sheets of lipids (phospholipids). • Found around the cell (the nucleus, vacuoles, mitochondria, and chloroplasts.) • Embedded with proteins and strengthened with cholesterol molecules.

  4. What’s a Phospholipid? • It’s a pair of fatty acid chains and a phosphate group attached to a glycerol backbone. • Polar (water-soluble) heads face out and the nonpolar fatty acids hang inside.

  5. Membrane Proteins • 1. Determine what particles can pass through the membrane. • 2. Serve as enzymes (may speed reactions). • 3. Act as markers that are recognized by chemicals and molecules from the inside and the outside of the cell (the immune system).

  6. cytoskeleton cholesterol carbohydrate chains membrane protein outside the cell interior of cell

  7. Cellular Transport • Diffusion– movement of particles from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration. • Continues until an equilibrium is reached -- EQUAL • This is Passive transport -- no energy is needed to move particles.

  8. Outside cell Inside cell

  9. Facilitated diffusion – embedded proteins act as tunnels allowing particles to “fall” through.

  10. Cellular Transport [2] • Active transport – energy is needed to move particles. • Carrier proteins – embedded proteins change shape to open and close passages across the membrane. • Endocytosis – taking something into the cell. • Exocytosis – expelling something from the cell.

  11. Osmosis • Diffusion of water across a selectively permeable membrane. • Occurs until water is balanced on both sides of the membrane.

  12. Cell Concentrations • Hypertonic solutions – more dissolved solute. Water will leave the cell. The Cell shrinks • Hypotonic solutions – less dissolved solute. Water enters the cell and the cell will swell. • Isotonic solutions – the same dissolved solute. Cell is unchanged

  13. Overcoming Osmosis • Contractile vacuoles – expel excess water from bacterial cells that live in water. • Turgor pressure – water pressure in a plant cell. Loss of turgor pressure causes wilting (plasmolysis).

  14. LAB • Glucose – is a sugar • Starch is a carbohydrate made of a long chain of glucose molecules • Starch is a very large molecule

  15. Starch

  16. Color indicators • Indicates the presence of something by showing a change in color • Iodine is a color indicator for starch • Iodine is a brownish color • It turns ______ in presence of starch

More Related