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The Cell Membrane “The Gatekeeper” Overview • Cell membrane separates living cell from nonliving surroundings • Controls traffic in & out of the cell It is called selectively permeable b/c it allows some substances to cross more easily than others • Made of phospholipids, proteins & other macromolecules Intro video What’s so important about the cell membrane? • The cell membrane regulates what enters and leaves your cells. • You eat food, your stomach breaks it into little pieces. • The little pieces are brought to your cells • Your cell membrane lets those little pieces into the cell. • Without letting the bad stuff in. • Your body can use these little pieces of food for energy and to make things the body needs. • Example: release energy in bonds of small sugars like glucose Cell Membrane • The cell membrane is can also be called the plasma membrane. Structure of CM • Phosopholipid bilayer Tough flexible barrier between the inside and outside of the cell. • Protein molecules – Run completely through lipid layer – Form channels & pumps Phospholipids • Fatty acid tails Are hydrophobic • Phosphate group head Phosphate Fatty acid Are hydrophilic • Arranged as a bilayer I knew that! carbohydrates • The cell membrane also has carbohydrates that extend to the outside of the cell. • This carb is involved in cell communication • Its like a cell phone that allows the cells to communicate with each other. • It extends off of a protein • Not all proteins have them though. Proteins in the CM Movement across the Cell Membrane Movement Though the CM • The cell membrane is said to be Selectively Permeable • This means it allows some things inside but other things are rejected. • Things coming in and out of the cell are called transport. Membrane Processes Types of Cell Membrane transport include: • 1. diffusion (three types of diffusion) – A. passive transport – B. facilitated diffusion – C. Osmosis • 2. active transport • Its based on whether ATP is needed or not. Diffusion • Diffusion movement from high low concentration Diffusion • Move from HIGH to LOW concentration – “passive transport” – no energy needed diffusion Diffusion across cell membrane • Cell membrane is the boundary between inside & outside… – separates cell from its environment What diffuses in and out of the cell? OUT IN food carbohydrates sugars, proteins amino acids lipids salts, O2, H2O OUT IN waste ammonia salts CO2 H2O products cell needs materials in & products or waste out Diffusion through phospholipid bilayer • What molecules can get through directly? – fats & other lipids inside cell NH3 lipid salt • What molecules can NOT get through directly? – polar molecules • H 2O – ions outside cell sugar aa H 2O • salts, ammonia – large molecules • starches, proteins Channels through cell membrane • Membrane becomes semipermeable with protein channels – specific channels allow specific material across cell membrane inside cell NH3 salt H 2O aa sugar outside cell A. Passive Transport • Passive transport: The movement of material across the cell membrane from areas of high concentration to areas of low concentration. • cell does not need energy or ATP Passive transport is a type of diffusion that requires a cell membrane. • Regular diffusion does not. • http://videos.howstuffworks.com/hsw/23424-cell-diffusion-acrossthe-cell-membrane-video.htm B. Facilitated Diffusion: Protein helpers DIFFUSE substances across the cell membrane FASTER than normal. – Proteins are specific to the substance they carry. – Still is diffusion, meaning it goes from high to low so no ATP is needed. Facilitated Diffusion –no energy needed facilitated = with help open channel = fast transport high low “The Bouncer” C. Osmosis • Osmosis is the diffusion of water. • Water is very important to life, so we talk about water separately • Diffusion of water from high concentration of water to low concentration of water – across a semi-permeable membrane Concentration of water • Direction of osmosis is determined by comparing the concentration of solutes dissolved on each side of the membrane. – Hypertonic - more solute, less water – Hypotonic - less solute, more water – Isotonic - equal solute, equal water water hypotonic hypertonic net movement of water Hypertonic: "HYPER" means more – there are more solutes (salt) outside the cell than inside – Osmotic pressure causes the water to be sucked out. – Plant cells: vacuole loses water; the cells shrink, causing wilting. – In animal cells, cells also shrink. – In both cases, the cell may die. – Water always goes in the direction of the higher solute. – Higher solute=less water Hypotonic: HYPO means less – there are less solutes (salt) outside the cell than inside – Osmotic pressure causes, water to move into the cell. – The cell will gain water and grow larger. – In plant cells, vacuoles will fill – the cell wall keeps the plant from bursting – In animal cells, the cell is in danger of bursting, • Isotonic solution: concentration of solute (salt) is equal on both sides, • the water moves in and out at an equal rate • Cell size will not change. • "ISO" means the same Remember • During osmosis, the cell is permeable to the water (water can pass) but not the solutes (dissolved substances) such as salt and sugar. • Water moves across the membrane until an equilibrium is reached • Water concentration is equal on both sides of cell membrane. • The salts and sugars do not diffuse osmosis 2. active transport: molecules move from lower to higher concentration. lower higher • Does not naturally occur. http://videos.howstuffworks.com/hsw/23425-cell-active-transport-and-the-cellmembrane-video.htm http://videos.howstuffworks.com/hsw/14765-simply-science-active-transportvideo.htm 2. Active Transport • Cells move molecules against concentration gradient – Uses a protein “pump” which…. – “costs” energy = ATP low ATP high “The Doorman” Transport summary simple diffusion facilitated diffusion active transport ATP Cell membrane and homeostasis • http://videos.howstuffworks.com/hs w/23423-cell-homeostasis-and-thecell-membrane-video.htm How about large molecules? • Macromolecules are toooooo big to diffuse. • They must be moved into the cell through vesicles & vacuoles A. endocytosis •phagocytosis = “cellular eating” •pinocytosis = “cellular drinking” B. exocytosis exocytosis Endocytosis phagocytosis pinocytosis fuse with lysosome for digestion non-specific process review Fluid mosaic model • This model of the cell membrane is called the fluid mosaic model. • Do you know what a mosaic is? • Think about art. Mosaic • A piece of artwork made up of little pieces of tile lying close together but not connected. • It gives the illusion that it is all one piece but it is not. • Why is the cell membrane considered a mosaic model? • Because the pieces of the cell membrane are not actually attached, though the appear to be. • The phospholipids are not attached to each other. • The proteins are not attached other. Cell communication • Cell-to-Cell communication is important for multicellular organisms. • The billions of cells of a human or an oak tree must communicate in order to develop from a fertilized egg • and then survive and reproduce in turn. •. receptors • Receptor molecules play an important role in the interactions and communication between cells. • Two primary agents of cellular communication are hormones and chemicals produced by other cells • The chemical has instructions and tells the cell what is needed to be done.. Receptor molecule Chemical released by another celll Blocked signal • If those hormone signals are blocked, cellular communication is stopped and the organism’s homeostasis or health is affected. • Its like when you are out of range and your cell phone cannot get a signal. • You have no idea the other person is even trying to call you Receptors are specific • Unlike your cell phone, each receptor is specific to a a specific type of signal. • That’s kinda like trying to log onto someone’s wifi and you don’t have the password. • You cant acess the info without the correct password • The cell cant access just any chemical signal. It must fit the receptor. • Each cell has millions of receptors. Please explain how chemical signals work __________________________ _________________________ __________________________ _________________________ __________________________ Cell receptor animaton