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Explore the passive transport processes within cells, including diffusion, osmosis, and facilitated diffusion. Learn how molecules move across membranes driven by concentration gradients and the role of ion channels in cellular functions.
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Chapter 5Homeostasis and Transport Section 5.1
Passive Transport • The movement of substances across a cell membrane without any input of energy from the cell
Diffusion • Simplest type of passive transport • Molecules move from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration • Driven by kinetic energy
Equilibrium • When the concentration of the molecules of a substance are the same throughout a space
Diffusion Across Membranes • Cell membranes allow some molecules to pass through, but not others • Depends on size and type of molecule • Also depends on the chemical nature of the membrane
Osmosis • Water molecules diffuse across a cell membrane from an area of higher concentration of H2O to an area of lower concentration
Direction of Osmosis • Hypotonic- the concentration of solute molecules outside the cell is LOWER than the inside of the cell • Water moves INTO the cell
Hypertonic- the concentration of solute molecules outside the cell is HIGHER than the inside of the cell • Water moves OUT OF the cell
Isotonic- the concentrations of solutes outside and inside the cell are equal • No movement of water occurs
How Cells Deal with Osmosis • Contractile vacuole- organelles to remove water • Turgor pressure- pressure of water against the cell wall • Plasmolysis- cells shrink away from cell walls
Facilitated Diffusion • The movement of molecules across a cell membrane through the use of carrier proteins • First, a carrier protein binds to a molecule on one side of the cell membrane
Second, the carrier protein changes shape shielding the molecule from the interior of the membrane • Finally, the molecule is released on the other side of the membrane
Diffusion Through Ion Channels • Ion channels provide small passages for ions to diffuse across the cell membrane • Channels may have “gates” that respond to stretching of the cell membrane, electrical signals, or chemicals in the cytosol
Ions such as Na+, K+, Ca2+, and Cl- are important for a variety of cell functions