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The Plasma Membrane and Cellular Transport

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Title: How do you think materials move in and out of the cell? Author: Bonnie Chen Last modified by: PISD Created Date: 8/20/2002 4:49:13 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Plasma Membrane and Cellular Transport


1
The Plasma Membraneand Cellular Transport
2
Maintaining a Balance
  • Maintain HOMEOSTASIS internal balance
  • Selective permeability allows some materials to
    pass through membrane while rejecting others.

3
Fluid-Mosaic Model
  • This description is of a plasma membrane that is
    made up of molecules that are free to flow among
    one another.
  • The kinds and arrangements of proteins and lipids
    vary from one membrane to another and give each
    type of membrane specific permeability properties.

4
Structure of the Plasma Membrane
  • Two-layered structure
  • Lipid bilayer
  • Made of lipid molecules with protein molecules in
    the lipid layer.
  • PROTEINS aid in the movement of materials through
    the membrane.

5
Structure of the Plasma Membrane
  • The Lipids have two fatty acids attached to
    glycerol and a phosphate group (phospholipid).
  • The Polar head of a Phospholipid molecule
    contains a polar phosphorus group, and two
    tails are long, nonpolar carbon chains.

6
Structure of the Plasma Membrane
7
Structure of the Plasma Membrane
  • F Phospholipid bilayer
  • Phospholipid
  • D Hydrophilic head
  • E Hydrophobic tails
  • I Cholesterol
  • Proteins
  • J transport
  • G Cytoskeletal filaments
  • A Carbohydrate chain
  • C Carbohydrate
  • Glycolipid
  • Glycoprotein

8
Proteins of the Plasma Membrane
  • 1) Transport Proteins
  • 2) Receptor Proteins

9
1) Transport Proteins
  • Channel Proteins channel for lipid insoluble
    molecules and ions to pass freely through
  • Carrier Proteins bind to a substance and carry
    it across membrane, change shape in process

10
2) Receptor Proteins
  • Bind to chemical messengers (Ex. hormones)
    which sends a message into the cell causing
    cellular reaction

11
How do materials move into and out of the cell?
  • Materials must move in and out of the cell
    through the plasma membrane.
  • Some materials move between the phospholipids.
  • Some materials move through the proteins.

12
Plasma Membrane Transport
  • Molecules move across the plasma membrane by

Active Transport
Passive Transport
13
What are three types of passive transport?
Passive Transport
  1. Diffusion
  2. Facilitated Diffusion
  3. Osmosis

ATP energy is not needed to move the molecules
through.
14
Passive Transport 1 Diffusion
DIFFUSION
  • Also called Brownian Motion random motion of
    molecules.
  • Molecules can move directly through the
    phospholipids of the plasma membrane

15
What is Diffusion?
  • Diffusion is the net movement of molecules from a
    high concentration to a low concentration until
    equally distributed.
  • Diffusion rate is related to temperature,
    pressure, state of matter, size of concentration
    gradient, and surface area of membrane.
  • Dynamic Equilibrium
  • a continuous movement
  • of molecules, but no
  • change in concentration.

16
Concentration Gradient
  • The difference in concentration of a substance
    across a space.

17
Passive Transport 2 Facilitated Diffusion
  • Molecules can move through the plasma membrane
    with the aid of transport proteins
  • This is called

FACILITATED DIFFUSION
18
What is Facilitated Diffusion?
  • Facilitated diffusion is the net movement of
    molecules from a high concentration to a low
    concentration with the aid of channel or carrier
    proteins.

19
Passive Transport 3 Osmosis
  • Water Molecules can move directly through the
    phospholipids of the plasma membrane
  • This is called

OSMOSIS
20
What is Osmosis?
  • Osmosis diffusion of WATER molecules through a
    membrane from an area of higher water
    concentration to lower water concentration.

21
Osmosis in action
  • What will happen in the U-tube if water freely
    moves through the membrane but glucose can not
    pass?
  • Water moves from side with high concentration of
    water to side with lower concentration of water.
    Movement stops when osmotic pressure equals
    hydrostatic pressure.

22
Osmosis and Tonicity
  • Tonicity refers to the total solute concentration
    of the solution outside the cell.
  • What are the three types of tonicity?
  • Isotonic
  • Hypotonic
  • Hypertonic

23
Isotonic
  • Solution in which the concentration of water
    (solvent) outside the cell is the same as the
    concentration inside the cell.
  • What will happen to a cell placed in an Isotonic
    solution?
  • The cell will have no net movement of water and
    will stay the same size.
  • Ex. Blood plasma has high concentration of
    albumin molecules to make it isotonic to tissues.

24
Hypotonic (Less Concentration)
  • Solution in where concentration of water
    (solvent) outside the cell is higher than the
    concentration inside the cell.
  • What will happen to a cell placed in a Hypotonic
    solution?
  • The cell will gain water and swell.
  • If the cell bursts, then we call this lysis. (Red
    blood cells hemolysis)
  • In plant cells with rigid cell walls, this
    creates turgor pressure.

25
Hypertonic (More Concentrated)
  • Solution in which concentration of water
    (solvent) outside the cell is lower than the
    concentration inside the cell.
  • What will happen to a cell placed in a Hypertonic
    solution?
  • The cell will lose water and shrink.
  • In plant cells, the central vacuole will shrink
    and the plasma membrane will pull away from the
    cell wall causing the cytoplasm to shrink called
    plasmolysis.

26
Review Tonicity
  • What will happen to a red blood cell in a
    hypertonic solution?
  • What will happen to a red blood cell in an
    isotonic solution?
  • What will happen to a red blood cell in a
    hypotonic solution?

27
What are three types of Active transport?
  • 1) Active Transport
  • 2) Exocytosis
  • 3) Endocytosis
  • Phagocytosis
  • Pinocytosis

Active Transport
ATP energy is required to move the molecules
through.
28
Active Transport
  • Molecules move from areas of low concentration to
    areas of high concentration with the aid of ATP
    energy.

29
The Importance of Active Transport
  • Bring in essential molecules
  • Rid cell of unwanted molecules (Ex. sodium from
    urine in kidneys)
  • Maintain internal conditions different from the
    environment
  • Regulate the volume of cells by controlling
    osmotic potential
  • Control cellular pH
  • Re-establish concentration gradients to run
    facilitated diffusion. (Ex. Sodium-Potassium
    pump and Proton pumps)

30
Active Transport 2 Exocytosis (Exo out)
  • Movement of large molecules bound in vesicles out
    of the cell with the aid of ATP energy. Vesicle
    fuses with the plasma membrane to eject
    macromolecules.
  • Ex. Proteins, polysaccharides, polynucleotides,
    whole cells, hormones, mucus, neurotransmitters,
    waste

31
Active Transport 3 Endocytosis (Endo In)
  • Movement of large molecules into the cell by
    engulfing them in vesicles, using ATP energy.
  • Two types of Endocytosis
  • Phagocytosis
  • Pinocytosis
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