Ch. 4 Cells and Their Environment. The purpose of this chapter is to learn how substances move into...
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Transcript of Ch. 4 Cells and Their Environment. The purpose of this chapter is to learn how substances move into...
![Page 1: Ch. 4 Cells and Their Environment. The purpose of this chapter is to learn how substances move into and out of cells. Two ways in which this is done:](https://reader035.fdocuments.us/reader035/viewer/2022072013/56649e4e5503460f94b44226/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Ch. 4
Cells and Their Environment
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• The purpose of this chapter is to learn how substances move into and out of cells.
• Two ways in which this is done:
1) passive transport
2) active
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• Passive transport: does not require energy
• Active transport: requires energy
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Diffusion
• Your body responds to external conditions to maintain a stable internal environment.
• When organisms adjust internally to changing external conditions, they are maintaining homeostasis.
• One way cells maintain homeostasis is by controlling the movement of substances across their cell membrane.
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• Cells must use energy to transport some substances across the cell membrane.
• Other substances move across the cell membrane without any use of energy by the cell.
• Passive transport:
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• Concentration gradient:
• Equilibrium: fig. 1, p 75.
• Diffusion:
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• To diffuse “down” its concentration gradient-from an area of high concentration to an area of lower concentration- a substance must be able to pass through the cell membrane.
• The cell membrane is selectively permeable to substances. The nonpolar interior of the lipid bilayer repels ions and most polar molecules. Refer back to p. 32, Polarity section.
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• These substances are prevented from diffusing across the cell membrane.
• Molecules that are very small or nonpolar can diffuse across the cell membrane down their concentration gradient.
• The diffusion of such molecules across the cell membrane is the simplest type of passive transport.
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Osmosis
• Osmosis:
• Table 1, p. 77.
• Hypertonic solution:
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• Hypotonic solution:
• Isotonic solution:
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Crossing the Cell Membrane
• Ions and most polar molecules cannot diffuse across the cell membrane because they cannot pass through the nonpolar interior of the lipid bilayer.
• Such substances can cross the cell membrane when they are aided by transport proteins.
• Transport proteins called channels provide polar passageways through which ions and polar molecules can move across the cell membrane.
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• Each channel allows only a specific substance to pass through the cell membrane.
• Ex.: Some channels allow only one type of ion to cross the cell embrane, while others transport a particular kind of sugar or amino acid.
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• Diffusion through ion channels:
• Electrical charge and ion transport:
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• Facilitated Diffusion:
• What are the 3 steps?
• Carrier proteins: