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Cell Processes

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Cell Processes S. Burnham HHS Biology – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cell Processes


1
Cell Processes
  • S. Burnham
  • HHS
  • Biology

2
How do smells get out of the balloon?
  • Diffusion
  • Selectively permeable membrane
  • Homeostasis
  • Active transport
  • Hypertonic/hypotonic/isotonic
  • Osmosis

3
Concentration
  • The mass of a solute in a given volume of
    solution
  • If you dissolve 12 grams of salt in 3 liters of
    water, what is the concentration of salt in the
    solution?

4
  • 12g/3L 4g/L

5
  • Suppose you add 12 more grams of salt in to the
    solution. What would be the resulting
    concentration?

6
  • 12g 12g 24 g
  • 24g/3L 8g/L

7
  • What if you then added another 3 liters of water
    to that solution. What would be the resulting
    concentration?

8
  • 3L 3L 6L
  • 24g/6L 4g/L

9
4g/L 8g/L 4g/L
  • Which solution would be called the most
    concentrated?

10
  • 8g/L
  • Why?
  • 8g in 1L is more than 4g in 1L

11
Diffusion
  • Movement of particles from an area of high
    concentration to an area of low concentration
  • Particles try to reach equilibrium
  • Equilibrium is reached when the concentration of
    the solute is the same throughout the system

12
Diffusion
  • Substances diffuse across membranes without
    requiring the cell to use energy
  • Particles of a solution continue to move across
    the membrane even when equilibrium is reached,
    there is just no further change in concentration

13
Selectively Permeable
  • A membrane through which some substances can pass
    through, but some cannot

14
Hypertonic
  • Solution has higher solute concentration than the
    cell
  • Water will move from inside the cell to outside
    the cell
  • Figure 7-16

15
Hypotonic
  • Solution has a lower solute concentration than
    the cell
  • Water moves into the cell

16
Isotonic
  • Concentration of solutes is the same in and out
    of the cell

17
Utilize Fig. 7-16
  • A homeowner contracts a lawn company to add
    fertilizer to the lawn in order to make the grass
    grow better. This process is normally done by
    spraying a mixture of fertilizer and water onto
    the lawn
  • What would happen if too much fertilizer and too
    little water were sprayed onto the lawn?

18
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19
  • Can you suggest what happened to the cells of the
    grass?

20
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21
  • In that case, was the fertilizer-water mixture
    hypotonic or hypertonic compared to the grass
    cells?

22
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23
Active Transport (Fig. 7-19)
  • Movement of materials against the concentration
    gradient
  • Requires energy
  • Generally carried out by transport proteins in
    cell membrane
  • Can be used to transport calcium, potassium, and
    sodium ions across the membrane

24
Endocytosis
  • Membrane infolds to take in materials
  • Pocket breaks loose to form vacuole in the
    cytoplasm
  • Phagocytosis taking in food amoeba's use this
    to take in food
  • Pinocytosis membranes form pockets that fill
    with water and break off as vacuoles in the
    cytoplasm

25
Exocytosis
  • Membrane of vacuole fuses with cell membrane
  • Forces contents out of cell

26
Osmosis
  • Diffusion of water through a selectively
    permeable membrane
  • Water moves from an area of high water
    concentration to an area of low water
    concentration

27
Figure 7-15
  • In the beaker on the left, which solution is
    hypertonic and which is hypotonic?
  • The solution on the left side of the membrane is
    hypertonic and the solution on the right is
    hypotonic
  • In this model, to which material is the membrane
    permeable, water or sugar?
  • Water!! This makes the membrane selectively
    permeable
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