Homeostasis - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Homeostasis

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Title: PowerPoint Presentation Author: Ann & Steve Dau Last modified by: install Created Date: 10/7/2001 8:18:14 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Homeostasis


1
Homeostasis the
Plasma Membrane
2
Structure of the Plasma Membrane
  • 2 layers of lipids with proteins embedded within
    each layer
  • The lipids are called phospholipids
  • They have a polar head and a non-polar tail
  • HEAD
  • phosphate group which is soluble in water
    (hydrophilic)
  • TAIL
  • fatty acid chain that is not soluble in water
    (hydrophobic)

3
Structure of the Plasma Membrane
4
Structure of the Plasma Membrane
  • The plasma membrane is referred to as a fluid
    mosaic model
  • The plasma membrane is made up of many molecules
    which are free to move sideways
  • Fatty acid chains can be saturated or unsaturated
  • The more unsaturated fatty acids a membrane has,
    the more fluid it is.
  • Saturated or cholesterol chains are more rigid
    and stable

5
Structure of the Plasma Membrane
6
Maintaining a Balance
  • Living cells maintain a balance by controlling
    what goes into and out of the cell
  • The plasma membrane is a selectively permeable
    membrane it has the ability to allow some
    materials to pass through and keep others out
  • This also allows some cells to carry out
    different jobs than other cells

7
Maintaining a Balance
  • Some molecules can readily pass across the
    membrane while others cannot.
  • The size, polarity, and nature of the molecules
    will determine whether it passes readily or not

8
Diffusion
  • Diffusion is the net movement of particles from
    high concentration to low concentration
  • Diffusion cannot occur unless a substance is in a
    higher concentration in one region than in
    another. This difference is called a
    concentration gradient.
  • Dynamic equilibrium there is continuous
    movement, but no overall change
  • Dynamic movement
  • Equilibrium balance

9
Diffusion
10
Osmosis
  • Osmosis is the diffusion of water molecules
    through a selectively permeable membrane from an
    area of high concentration to an area of low
    concentration
  • A cell will lose water if it is placed in an
    environment in which the water concentration is
    lower than that of the cell contents

11
ISOTONIC SOLUTION
  • The concentration of a dissolved substance is the
    same as the concentration outside the cell.
  • Water molecules will still move, but there is no
    net movement of water.
  • No osmosis occurs b/c the cell is in dynamic
    equillibrium

12
HYPOTONIC SOLUTION
  • The concentration of dissolved substances is
    lower than the concentration within the cell
  • Water will rush into the cell causing an increase
    in pressure
  • This pressure is called turgor pressure

13
HYPERTONIC SOLUTION
  • The concentration of dissolved substances is
    higher than the concentration inside the cell
  • Water will rush out of the cell causing it to
    shrink
  • This loss of water from the cell is called
    plasmolysis

14
EFFECT of OSMOSIS on RED BLOOD CELLS
15
(No Transcript)
16
EFFECTS OF OSMOSIS ON CELLS WHEN PLACED IN
DIFFERENT SOLUTIONS
SOLUTION TYPE Concentration of dissolved substances (solutes) Concentration Gradient Results in Animal Cells Results in Plant Cells
ISOTONIC Same as the living cell Zero No change No Change
HYPOTONIC Lower than the living cell Net water movement into the cell Cell swells and bursts Pressure created by excess water stored in central vacuole
HYPERTONIC Higher than the living cell Net water movement out of the cell Cell shrinks plasmolysis Central vacuole collapses and plasmolysis occurs
17
Passive transport
  • When the cell does no work in moving particles
    across the membrane
  • Transport proteins allow needed substances or
    waste materials to move through the plasma
    membrane
  • The passive transport of materials across the
    plasma membrane by means of transport proteins is
    called facilitated diffusion.

18
Active transport
  • The transport of materials against a
    concentration gradient which requires energy.
  • BOTH endo- and exocytosis requires energy to move
    materials through the membrane
  • Endocytosis
  • the cell surrounds and takes in materials from
    its environment
  • Exocytosis
  • used to expel wastes
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