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A. Active Transport • a. Active transport is the transport of a substance across the cell membrane against its concentration gradient (from low to high concentration). • b. Active transport requires energy in the form of ATP. 1. Carrier Proteins act as “pumps” • a. Bind to a specific substance on one side of cell membrane • b. Moves the substance against the concentration gradient • c. From low to high concentration 2. Sodium Potassium Pump • a. A form of active transport • b. Carrier protein transports 3 Na+ out of the cell and 2 K+ into the cell • c. Both are being moved against the concentration gradient • i. Na+ is usually more concentrated outside the cell • ii. K+ is usually more concentrated inside the cell • d. Sodium Potassium pump uses ATP as energy source, can use up most of a cell’s ATP Phosphorylate: attachment of phosphate removal of phosophate 3. Purpose of the SodiumPotassium Pump • a. The pump prevents sodium from accumulating in the cell thereby preventing excess osmosis into the cell, which could potentially cause the cell to burst. • b. The pump maintains the concentration gradients of Na+ and K+ across the cell membrane, which many cells use to help in the transport of other substances, such as glucose across the cell membrane B. Bulk Transport • a. Movement of large molecules into and out of the cell. • b. Molecules that are too large for carrier proteins (e.g. proteins, polysaccharides) • c. Transported by vesicles 1. Endocytosis • -movement of substance into the cell by vesicle (Endo = in) • a. fuse with a lysosome or other organelles • b. Two main types of endocytosis: pinocytosis and phagocytosis. i. Pinocytosis • a. Movement of liquid and solutes into the cell • b. “cell drinking” • c. Example: maturing human egg cells use pinocytosis to take in dissolved nutrients ii. Phagocytosis • a. Movement of food particles into the cell • b. “cell eating” • c. Example: Amoeba eating or white blood cells engulfing bacteria 2. Exocytosis • -movement of substance out of the cell by vesicle (Exo = out) • a. vesicle fuses with the cell membrane, releasing contents outside the cell • b. cells use exocytosis to export modified contents from Golgi (e.g. proteins) C. Receptor Proteins • a. Binds to a specific signal molecule, allowing the cell to respond • Example- Signal molecules tell muscles when to contract and relax • b. Binding of a signal molecule to its matching receptor protein causes a change in the activity of the receiving cell. c. 3 common changes that may occur: • 1. changes in permeability • a. When paired with an ion channel, signal causes channel to open, allowing ions to cross • 2. triggers a second messenger • a. Second messenger sends another message to somewhere else in the cell • 3. enzyme action • a. Binding of signal may speed up chemical reactions in the cell