Title: CH. 6 : How Things
1CH. 6 How Things Get Into and Out of Cells
Elaine Nguyen, P.2
2Cell Membrane
Protein is embedded in membrane- can not flip-flop
- Regulates passage of materials into out of cell
(selectively permeable) - Allows for specialized chemical environments
3Water Potential
- Water potential- H2O moves from region of greater
to those of lower water concentration - Depends on pressure concentration
4Water Potential
- Water potential pressure potential solute
potential - Water always moves from high water potential
(higher free energy, more water molecules) to an
area of lower water potential ( lower free
energy, less water molecules)
5Osmotic Potential
- Is opposite of water potential
- High osmotic potential (solute potential) low
water potential
6Bulk Flow
- Bulk flow- molecules altogether in same
direction, cell to cell - Example
- Air moving in lungs
- Blood moving through veins
- Water flowing down a stream
7Diffusion
- Diffusion- moves molecules/ions independently
randomly until evenly distributed, net random
movement of molecules - Only efficient over short distance
- More effective with small molecules
- Moves down a concentration gradient
- Does not require energy
8Diffusion
- CO2, O2 are non-polar, move easily across membrane
9Diffusion and Dynamic Equilibrium
- All gradients have ceased to exist
- Random motion continues but net movement is zero
- As many solute molecules move from right to left
as left to right - As many solvent molecules move from right to left
as left to right
http//resources.yesican.yorku.ca/trek/scisat/fina
l/grade9/trans_chlorine1.html
10Diffusion and Countercurrent Exchange
http//sps.k12.ar.us/massengale/bird_notes_bi.htm
11Diffusion and Countercurrent Exchange
- Very good site to see diagrams of countercurrent
exchange
More efficient is countercurrent exchange, in
which the respiratory medium and the blood move
in opposite directions. The gas gradient is
maintained across the whole surface.
http//sps.k12.ar.us/massengale/bird_notes_bi.htm
12Osmosis
Most common molecule in cell is H2O
Solutions start off Isotonic- equal concentrations
Hypertonic vs. Hypotonic
- Osmosis- movement of H2O molecules across a
membrane - Osmotic pressure- pressure required to stop
osmotic movement, measures osmotic potential
13Effects of osmosis
http//www.emc.maricopa.edu/faculty/farabee/BIOBK/
BioBookDiversity_3.html
14Effects of osmosis
This protista is in salt water. What are the
effects of salt water on is?
http//www.microbeworld.org/htm/aboutmicro/microbe
s/types/protista.htm
15Large organism and osmosis
- How does the shark deal with being in a
hypertonic solution (salt water)
16Turgor Pressure
- Plants hypertonic to their environment (H2O tends
to diffuse into cells) - Turgor- internal pressure on cell wall that keeps
cell walls stiff the plant body crisp - Direct results of osmosis
17Carrier-Assisted Transport
(watch what the antiport does transports!)
- Necessary for those molecules with polar
functional groups (cause them to be hydrophilic
cannot move freely) - Transport proteins highly selective
- Ex facilitated diffusion, active transport
18- Transports ions, hydrophilic molecules
- Rate depends on steepness of concentration
gradient
19- Unlike facilitated diffusion, active transport
moves against a concentration gradient requires
energy
20Sodium- Potassium Pump
- 1/3 of energy in a resting animal is used in this
pump - Na pumped out
- K pumped in
- Ions move up a concentration gradient
- Transport protein changes shape as it works
21More Active transportglucose into liver
http//mcb.berkeley.edu/courses/mcb136/topic/Endoc
rine_Autonomic/SlideSet2/endo2_files/endshow.htm
22 phosphate group
An example of active transport
23Types of Transport Molecules
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25Exocytosis
Usually vesicles destined for exocytosis have
budded off from Golgi Apparatus
- Exocytosis- when vesicle reaches the cell
surface, its membrane fuses with the membrane of
the cell it can expel its contents outside
26Endocytosis
- Phagocytosis
- Pinocytosis
- Receptor-mediated endocytosis
- Endocytosis- materials to be taken into the cell
causes the membrane to bulge inward, making a
vesicle enclosing the substance
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28Example of Pinocytosis
- Ovum ( egg ) drinks fluid released by nurse cells
http//www.hwscience.com/Bio/HAP/HAP.html
29Receptor Mediated Endocytosis
- LDLs in the form of cholesterol are brought into
the cell. - Clatherin is a peripheral membrane protein- this
is where LDLs are brought in
http//cellbio.utmb.edu/cellbio/recend2.htmLDL20
receptors
30http//cellbio.utmb.edu/cellbio/recend2.htmLDL20
receptors
31Communication Between Cells
- Most communication done by chemical agents that
pass through the cell membrane or interact with
surface receptors
- Plasmodesmata- allows for direct communication
(in plant tissues) or gap junctions (in animal
tissues) allowing for material and electrical
impulses to pass
32http//fulton.edzone.net/cites/winkler-science/tea
m1/chap1.html