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Cell Boundaries

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Title: Cell Boundaries


1
Cell Boundaries
2
Cell Membrane
  • All cells are surrounded by a thin flexible
    barrier.
  • It is the responsibility of the cell membrane to
    control what enters and leaves the cell.
  • It also provides support and protection.
  • The membrane is composed of a double layer of
    lipids called the lipid bilayer
  • Also embedded within the bilayer are proteins and
    carbohydrate chains

3
Cell Walls
  • Cell walls lie outside the cell membrane an are
    found in many plant, fungi, prokaryotic cells.
  • Their main function is to provide support and
    protection for the cell.
  • Most cell walls are made from carbohydrates and
    proteins.
  • Plant cell walls are mostly cellulose.

4
Diffusion
  • Is the tendency of particles to move from an area
    where they are more concentrated to an area where
    they are less concentrated.
  • When the two areas have equal concentrations,
    this is known as equilibrium.
  • Because diffusion depends upon random particle
    movements, diffusion across cell membranes does
    not require the cell to use energy.

5
Osmosis
  • We already know what diffusion is, and osmosis is
    simply a special type of diffusion, where water
    molecules pass through a selectively permeable
    membrane (only allows certain sized molecules to
    pass).
  • The solute is to large to diffuse so the water
    molecule diffuses instead until equilibrium is
    reached.

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Facilitated Diffusion
  • How do large molecules like glucose diffuse
    across a cell membrane?
  • The membrane has protein channels that make it
    easy for certain molecules to cross it.
  • The channel is specific for the molecule it
    allows through.
  • Facilitated diffusion does NOT require the use of
    the cells energy.

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Active Transport
  • Cells must sometimes move materials against a
    concentration gradient. This is active
    transport.
  • This requires the cell to use energy.
  • The active transport of small molecules is
    generally done by protein pumps which are
    imbedded in the membrane.
  • Larger molecules are actively transported by
    either endocytosis or exocytosis.

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Endocytosis
  • Large molecules are active transported IN to the
    cell.
  • The membrane folds around the molecule and forms
    a vacuole within the cell.

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phagocytosis literally cell eating. These
amoeba are single celled organisms that eat
bacteria (and just about any bacteria-sized
particle that might be nutritious). 
15
Exocytosis
  • Large molecules are actively transported OUT of
    the cell.
  • During exocytosis, the membrane of a vacuole
    surrounding the material fuses with the cell
    membrane.
  • Then it forces the material out of the cell

16
Receptor-Mediated Exocytosis
17
Proton Pump in Plants
18
Website for Cell Movement
http//www2.yvcc.edu/Biology/109Modules/Modules/Me
mbraneTransport/membranetransport.htm
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