* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Passive Transport - Liberty Union High School District
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Homeostasis and Membrane Transport Part 1 Chapter 3 The big picture! Living things strive for balance or homeostasis Homeostasis: Stable internal conditions of a living thing; balance. Equilibrium: Everything is in perfect balance. Transport across a membrane is one way the body achieves balance. Cell membrane is semi-permeable Semi-permeable: only certain things can enter or exit the cell Close-up view of the cell membrane Cell Membrane is made of 2 main parts… 1) Phospholipid bilayer (2 layers of special lipids) Hydrophilic “heads” are attracted to water Hydrophobic “tails” repel water and point away from it Video clip of membrane (1:27): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qqsf_UJcfB c Pair Share #1 Define homeostasis in your own words. What are some things your body tries to keep balanced? Our bodies must balance various solutions Solution: a mixture of things dissolved in water. Ex: Blood is a solution of cells, nutrients, oxygen, carbon dioxide, waste products, and other molecules floating in water Concentration: is a measure of how much substance there is compared to how much water Solute: substance being dissolved, like sugar or salt Solvent: substance doing the dissolving (water) LOW CONCENTRATION Less Solute More Solvent (water) HIGH CONCENTRATION More Solute Less Solvent (water) Pair Share #2 Which solution is more concentrated: 3% salt solution or 5% salt solution? Concentration Gradient: when there is a difference of concentrations between two sides. Not a concentration gradient (equal on both sides) Concentration gradient There are 3 Solution Types: 1. Isotonic: Two solutions have the same concentration 2. Hypotonic: A LESS concentrated solution • Water > solute 3. Hypertonic: A MORE concentrated solution • Water < solute When a cell is in an isotonic solution… •Water and solutes move both ways equally. When a cell is in a hypertonic solution… •Solution is more concentrated than cell •Water leaves the cell and goes into the solution •Cell shrinks, shrivels When a cell is in a hypotonic solution… •Solution is less concentrated than cell • Water from solution will go into the cell • Cell swells and can burst (“lyse”) unless it has a cell wall to prevent this ISOTONIC SOLUTION ANIMAL CELL PLANT CELL HYPOTONIC SOLUTION HYPERTONIC SOLUTION Passive Transport: No energy (ATP) is needed. Moves WITH the concentration gradient (high 3 low) Types of Passive Transport: 1. Diffusion 2. Osmosis 3. Facilitated Diffusion 1. Diffusion: movement of molecules (other than water) from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration Diffusion will continue until an equilibrium is reached. Osmosis 2. Osmosis: Osmosis is the diffusion of water Water moves from where there is more water molecules to less water molecules. Pair Share #3 True or false? Osmosis is the diffusion of starch molecules through a selectively permeable membrane. 3. Facilitated Diffusion: When molecules cannot squeeze through phospholipids, they use channel/carrier proteins to enter/exit the cell