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Cell Membrane and Membrane Transport. Passive Transport What can move into and out of cells? Active Transport How do cells maintain homeostasis? http://www.northland.cc.mn.us/biology/Biology1111/animations/transport1.html. Warm-up: Write answers in spaces.
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Cell Membrane and Membrane Transport Passive Transport What can move into and out of cells? Active Transport How do cells maintain homeostasis? http://www.northland.cc.mn.us/biology/Biology1111/animations/transport1.html
Warm-up: Write answers in spaces. • Why is it necessary for cells to control what enters and leaves them?________________ ____________________________________ • Does passive transport take energy? ______ • Give one of the diffusion examples discussed last class.____________________________ • Explain what a concentration gradient is. ____________________________________ • Does diffusion involve going up or down a concentration gradient? _________________
The Cell Membrane – a selectively permeable phospholipid bilayer with embedded proteins
Passive TransportWhat can move into and out of cells? • Diffusion is Caused by the Random Movement of Particles • random motion and concentration causes… • movement of substances from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration
How does temperature affect the rate of diffusion? As temperature increases, the rate of diffusion _____________ .
Concentration Gradient Type of transport?
Passive Transport = Diffusion (and Osmosis!) • Movement of substances across a semi-permeable membrane from high to low concentration ** movement is down a concentration gradient example: clothes falling out of a packed closet your example:_______________ Does passive transport take energy? _____
Water Diffuses into and out of Cells by Osmosis Osmosis – the diffusion of water through a selectively permeable membrane Does this take energy? _____ because we are talking about ________ transport
red blood cells (animal)
Osmosis of red onion cells Normal cells in tap water ______________ salt water is added… Salt water is _________________ compared to the red onion cells. __________________
Did you know? H2O On humid days, wooden drawers in dressers absorb water from the air because of osmosis.
more ways of passive transport… • Proteins Help Some Substances Cross the Cell Membrane • Diffusion though ion channels • A doughnut shaped protein with a polar hole • pulls ions through cell membrane like a magnet < Ion channel… inside is polar Phospholipid bilayer Cystic Fibrosis Website: http://www.dwmtech.com/Medical/cysticfibrosis.htm
more ways of passive transport… • Facilitated diffusion • Uses carrier proteins to transport specific substances into or out of the cell
Active TransportHow do cells maintain homeostasis? • Movement of substances across a semi-permeable membrane from low to high concentration ** upa concentration gradient ex: stuffing clothes into a closet to clean up your room your example:_______________________ Does this take energy? ________
Sodium-Potassium Pump purpose: enables nerves and muscles cells to send electro-chemical signals http://www.brookscole.com/chemistry_d/templates/student_resources/shared_resources/animations/ion_pump/ionpump.html
the sodium-potassium pump... • You may noticed every time the sodium-potassium pump operates, it pumps 2 K+ in and 3 Na+ out. That is not an even exchange, right? • By pumping more positive charges out than in, this pump helps to keep a more negative (less positive) environment inside the cell. • sodium-potassium pump is an electrogenic pump. • electrogenic means "electric charge generating."
Na+K+ pump • purpose: cells able to send electrical signals to respond (react) to stimuli. • Is this passive or active transport? _________ (hint: is energy being used?) • Name 2 body systems that need to be able to respond to the environment. ______________
Vesicles Move Large Substances Across Membranes (exocytosis) http://www.emc.maricopa.edu/faculty/farabee/BIOBK/BioBooktransp.html#The%20Cell%20Membrane
Phagocytosis: a type of endocytosis Phagocytosis of a Reproducing Bacterium by an Amoeba Neat website of amoeba eating by phagocytosis http://www.ivyhall.district96.k12.il.us/4th/kkhp/Microbes/amoeba1.html#AeatsP
Membrane Receptor Proteins Receive Information • Functions of receptor proteins • Changes in permeability – may cause the ion channel to open to allow certain ions to cross the membrane • Second messengers – causes formation of second messenger inside the cell to activate chemical reaction • Enzyme action – may speed up chemical reactions inside the cell
Paramecium’s Contractile Vacuole • http://www.northland.cc.mn.us/biology/Biology1111/animations/transport1.html