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Cell Membranes and Interaction with their environment Structure and Functions Cell Membranes 1. All cells have a cell membrane 2. Functions: a. Controls what enters and exits the cell to maintain an internal balance called homeostasis b. Provides protection and support for the cell Cell Membranes 3. Structure of cell membrane Lipid Bilayer -2 layers of phospholipids a. Phosphate head is polar (water loving) b. Fatty acid tails non-polar (water fearing) c. Proteins embedded in membrane Polar heads love water Proteins Non-polar tails hide from water . Cell Membranes Cell membranes have pores (holes) in it a. Selectively permeable (semi- permeable): Allows some molecules in and keeps other molecules out b. Take cell membrane quiz! a. http://www.wisconline.com/objects/ViewObject.aspx?I D=AP1101 Types of Cell Transport 1. Passive Transport 2. Active Transport Endocytosis Exocytosis Passive Transport Characteristics Types of Passive Transport No energy required 1. Diffusion Move due to gradient differences in concentration, pressure, charge 2. Facilitated diffusion Move to equalize gradient HIGH low 3. Osmosis Vocab Concentration gradient is the different amounts of solutes or substances in one place Solute – a SUBSTANCE dissolved in a fluid Solvent – the FLUID part of a solution Solution – a MIXTURE of two or more substances (a solute and solvent) Diffusion Diffusion is the movement of any particles from an area of HIGH concentration to an area of low concentration. Molecules move to equalize concentration Equilibrium Equilibrium– occurs when the particles that were diffusing are now equally distributed Movement Across the Cell Membrane A few molecules diffuse freely across the membrane: Water, Carbon dioxide, Ammonia, Oxygen Facilitated Diffusion 2. Facilitated Diffusion is diffusion of specific particles through transport proteins found in the membrane Channels (are specific) help molecule or ions enter or leave the cell No energy is used Process of Facilitated Transport Protein binds with molecule Shape of protein changes Molecule moves across membrane Osmosis Osmosis- diffusion of water through a selectively permeable membrane Water is so small and there is so much of it the cell can’t control its movement through the cell membrane. Equilibrium occurs until water is balanced on both sides of the membrane. ONLY DIFFUSES IN OSMOSIS!!! Solute/Solvent/Solution This is sugar water. What is the solute? What is the solvent? What is the whole mixture called? Solute/Solvent/Solution A glass of iced tea. What is the solute? What is the solvent? What is the whole mixture called? Solute/Solvent/Solution Ex: Propel Energy Drink What is the solute? What is the solvent? What is the whole mixture called? Solute/Solvent/Solution Ex: Dr. Pepper What is the solute(s)? What is the solvent? What is the whole mixture called? Osmosis What direction will the water go? are solutes Types of Osmosis: Hypertonic solutions – more dissolved solutes Hypotonic solutions – less dissolved solutes Isotonic solutions – the same dissolved solutes “Hyper-” means over, above, a lot “Hypo-” means under, below “Iso-” means equal or the same Hypertonic Solution • More solute outside the cell • Less water outside the cell Result: The WATER will move OUT of the cell, causing the cell to shrink (or crenate) Osmosis Animations for isotonic, hypertonic, and hypotonic solutions Osmosis Animations for isotonic, hypertonic, and hypotonic solutions Hypotonic Solution Less solute outside of the cell More water outside of the cell Result: The WATER will move INTO the cell, causing the cell to swell or burst (lysis) Osmosis Animations for isotonic, hypertonic, and hypotonic solutions Isotonic Solution Water is the same outside the cell and the same inside the cell. Solutes are the same inside the cell as outside the cell. Result: Water is moving in and out at the same rate How Organisms Deal with Osmotic Pressure Paramecium (protist) removing excess water video • Bacteria and plants have cell walls that prevent them from over-expanding. In plants the pressure exerted on the cell wall is called tugor pressure. • A protist like paramecium have contractile vacuoles that collect water flowing in and pump it out to prevent them from over-expanding. • Salt water fish pump salt out of their specialized gills so they do not dehydrate. • Animal cells are bathed in blood. Kidneys keep the blood isotonic by removing excess salt and water. A study of Tonicity in Cells Active Transport Characteristics Types of Active Transport Molecular movement 1. requires energy/ATP to move against the concentration gradient LOW high Example is sodiumpotassium pump Endocytosis 2. Exocytosis Endocytosis Movement of large material Particles Organisms Large molecules Movement is into cells Types of endocytosis bulk-phase (nonspecific) receptor-mediated (specific) Process of Endocytosis Plasma membrane surrounds material Edges of membrane meet Membranes fuse to form vesicle Forms of Endocytosis Phagocytosis – cell eating Pinocytosis – cell drinking Exocytosis Reverse of endocytosis Cell moves material OUTSIDE the cell Exocytosis Vesicle moves to cell surface Membrane of vesicle fuses Materials expelled Active Transport • cell uses energy (in the form of ATP) • actively moves molecules to where they are needed • Movement from an area of low concentration to an area of high concentration • (Low High) • Three Types Types of Active Transport 1. Protein Pumps transport proteins that require energy to do work • Example: Sodium / Potassium Pumps are important in nerve responses. Protein changes shape to move molecules: this requires energy! Types of Active Transport 2. Endocytosis: taking bulky material into a cell • • • • • Uses energy Cell membrane folds in around food particle creating a vesicle that is made of the cell membrane “cell eating” Lysosomes come and digests food This is how white blood cells eat bacteria! Types of Active Transport 3. Exocytosis: Forces material out of cell in bulk • membrane surrounding the material fuses with cell membrane • Cell changes shape – requires energy • EX: Hormones or wastes released from cell