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Hypertonic, Hypotonic and Isotonic Warm Up • Using the terms hypotonic and hypertonic, describe the cell and the environment. Answer • The cell is hypotonic since it has a smaller concentration of solute & greater conc. of water • The environment is hypertonic since it has a greater conc. of solute & smaller conc. of water Environments Isotonic – “same strength” Hypertonic – “above strength” Hypotonic – “below strength” • “strength” refers to the amount of solute not water Isotonic • Isotonic means that the two environments (separated by a membrane) have the same concentration of water and the same concentration of solutes. Why are the terms Hypertonic and Hypotonic Important? • Hypertonic and hypotonic help us to predict the direction that water and solutes will move. • Keep in mind that since hypotonic means less solutes (more water), Osmosis (the movement of water) will move from hypotonic toward hypertonic. • Water will move to dilute the solute What about the cell in each case? The Fate of Animal Cells Animal Cells do not have Cell Walls! • There is no cell wall to help combat osmosis or create pressure. Plant Cells have Cell Walls! Plasmolysis Plant Cells have Cell Walls • The pressure of the cell membrane against the cell wall is known as turgor pressure. • The cell wall pushes back so that water can’t cause the cell to burst. • When water rushes out of the plant cell, the cell membrane pulls away from the cell wall and plasmolysis occurs. Passive Transport • Diffusion is the process by which particles move from an area of high concentration to an area of lower concentration o Examples: carbon dioxide and oxygen gas • Facilitated diffusion is the process in which molecules that cannot directly diffuse across the membrane pass through special protein channels. o Examples: glucose and water • Osmosis is the diffusion of water through a selectively permeable membrane from an area of higher to lower concentration Active Transport • The movement of materials against a concentration difference is known as active transport. • Active transport requires energy • Examples: • Molecular transport – molecules and ions are carried across by protein pumps (sodium-potassium pump) • Bulk Transport o Endocytosis – taking material into the cell by means of infolding, or pockets, of the cell membrane (WBC) o Exocytosis – when cells release large amounts of material (contractile vacuole) Lipid Bilayer Lipid Bilayer Structure