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Part 1. Cell Membrane and Transport. What is an Isotonic Solution? . [Water] inside cell = [Water] outside cell Cell is at equilibrium Molecules are equally distributed in end The amount of water entering the cell = the amount of water leaving the cell. 95% water. 95% water. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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What is an Isotonic Solution? • [Water] inside cell =

[Water] outside cell

• Cell is at equilibrium– Molecules are equally

distributed in end• The amount of water

entering the cell = the amount of water leaving the cell

95% water

95% water

Page 4: Part 1

What is a hypotonic solution?• A solution that has

MORE water, and LESS solute

• The cell can lyse or burst if left in a hypotonic solution

100% water

95% water

Page 5: Part 1

What is a hypertonic solution?• A solution that has

LESS water and MORE solute

• The cell will dehydrate90% water

95% water

Page 6: Part 1

Which direction does water flow?

a) Water doesn’t flow at all.b) Water flows from an area of low

concentration to an area of high concentration.

c) Water flows from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration.

Page 7: Part 1

Lipids2. Phospholipids

– Glycerol with Phosphate Head + 2 Fatty Acid Chains

– Amphiphilic (“Both” “lover”)• Hydrophilic head• Hydrophobic tail

– Forms 2 layers in water– Makes up cell membranes

Organic Compounds: Lipids: Phospholipids

PhosphateGlycerol

Fatty Acids

Page 8: Part 1

phospholipid Membraneproteins

Hydrophobicregion

Hydrophilic heads of phospholipids

Carbohydrate side chain

MarkerProteins (has carbohydrate side chain attached)

Page 9: Part 1

Different Types of Membrane Proteins (page 77)

TRANSPORTERS RECEPTORS ENZYMESSIGNAL/ RECOGNITION

Page 10: Part 1

Different Types of Membrane Proteins (page 77)

signal/recognition

Enzymes

receptor

transporter

Page 11: Part 1

The plasma/cell membrane is selectively permeable

~ It controls what enters and leaves the cell ~ only certain substances are allowed to pass

through

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What can and can not pass through the membrane?

CAN PASS THROUGH

• Other lipids and fatty substances that dissolve in fat (hydrophobic)

• Small molecules, like water

• Things w/o charge

CAN NOT PASS THROUGH

1. Water-like substances (hydrophilic)

2. Large molecules3. Ions: Molecules with

plus (+) or minus (-) charges

CH2OH

OH

CH2OH

OH

Page 13: Part 1

Go to page 78…

• Fill in the table…• What substances can pass through the

membrane?

Page 14: Part 1

No energy is used[High] [Low] (it’s the natural flow)

This means it goes down a concentration gradient

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3 types of Passive Transport

1. Diffusion2. Osmosis3. Facilitated Diffusion

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Diffusion

[High] [Low]

Page 17: Part 1

Osmosis

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Facilitated Diffusion+ CH2OH

OH

Passive Transport: Facilitated Diffusion

Channel protein

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Energy is used[Low] [High]

This means it goes up or against a concentration gradient

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3 Examples of Active Transport

1. Protein pumps2. Endocytosis3. Exocytosis

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Protein PumpsProtein Pumps: proteins use energy to pull or

pump materials into or out of the cell to stockpile or store substances the cell needs

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Go to page 87 - 88

8

2

16

7

4

3

5

Page 23: Part 1

Now complete page 88 to check your understanding

Page 24: Part 1

Endocytosis• When cells engulf particles into the cell• 2 types

1. Phagocytosis: When a cell wraps part of its membrane arounda large particle forming a “pocket” or vesicle

2. Pinocytosis: The same process, but with smaller particles or liquids

Page 25: Part 1

Exocytosis(opposite of endocytosis)

1. A vesicle carrying a substance 2. fuses with the cell membrane 3. and releases the substance

Inside the cell Outside the cell

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Check for understanding• Complete pages 100 – 101 Section Review