Cell Transport and Homeostasis in Biology

Cell Transport and
Homeostasis
H Bio
Cell Transport and the Cell Membrane
Functions:
Regulates 
what enters and leaves the cell
Selectively Permeable – 
allows only certain substances to enter and
leave “
selects
” also called 
semi-permeable
 Aids in 
protection and support
 Contains and separates a cell from its environment
 Made of a phospholipid bilayer
Cell Transport and the Cell Membrane
Molecules found in the cell membrane (biological membranes)
 
Lipids, mainly 
phospholipids
, animal cells also contain the steroid
cholesterol
 to aid in membrane fluidity.
Proteins (receptor, enzyme, transport/channel, carrier)
Carbohydrates
 
– chains that attach to membrane proteins
(
glycoproteins
) or lipids (
glycolipids
) in the cell membrane
serve as “name/ID tags” for cell to cell recognition
Cell Transport and the Cell Membrane
Fluid Mosaic Model
Bilayer is fluid in nature with
proteins embedded throughout
Phospholipid Bilayer
Contain a hydrophilic head and a
nonpolar hydrophobic tail
H bonds form between the
phospholipids head and the watery
environment inside and outside of the
cell
Hydrophobic interactions force the
tails to face inward
Phospholipids are not bonded to each
other, making the layer fluid
Cholesterol embedded in the
membrane makes is stronger and less
fluid
Cell Transport and the Cell Membrane
Passive Transport 
 down a concentration gradient, no E 
Diffusion
Osmosis
Facilitated Diffusion
7.3  Cell Transport
 
A)
Passive Transport
 – no energy required 
 
ex)  
DIFFUSION
DIFFUSION
:  movement of
molecules from H 
 L concentration
 
 
 
*  across a semi-permeable membrane until equilibrium is reached
 
ex)  
FACILITATED 
FACILITATED 
DIFFUSION
DIFFUSION
:  use of protein channels (diffusion w/help)
  
*  to move charged molecules or large items move in/out
  
*  still from H 
 L concentration (no energy needed)
  
*  ex) glucose, certain ions
  
*  ex)  diffusion of water (
OSMOSIS
OSMOSIS
) thru semi-permeable membrane
 
Different solution environments:
 
 
HYPERTONIC
HYPERTONIC
 = solution is high (hyper = above) in solute (ex:  salt water)
 
HYPOTONIC
HYPOTONIC
 = solution is low (hypo = below) in solute (ex:  fresh water)
 
 
ISOTONIC
ISOTONIC
 = solution is a equilibrium with outside environment
1
2
3
The Effect of Osmosis on Cells
 
Cell shrinking = plasmolysis
Cell swelling and bursting = cytolysis
Cell Transport and the Cell Membrane
Active Transport 
 up/against gradient, required E (ATP)
Membrane/Molecular Pumps
Bulk Transport
Endocytosis
Exocytosis
 
B)
Active Transport
 
– energy needed to move items from L
H
concentration (against/up the concentration gradient)
 
ex)  molecular :  small molecules and ions
  
-  moved through special protein channels
  
-  nerve cells use the 
Na/K pump
Na/K pump
 (33% of all our energy!)
 
 
ex) 
 
bulk
:  for very large items
  
-  requires cell membrane to change shape
   
a)  
endo
cytosis
 – cell membrane folds inward, brings item in
    
*  
phagocytosis
 (cell 
eating
) used by amoeba and WBC’s
    
*  
pinocytosis
 (cell 
drinking
):  packets of fluid brought
   
     inside cell
   
b) 
exo
cytosis
 – materials are released from the cell
    
*  vacuole fuses with membrane,
    
    contents released to outside
    
*  ex:  hormones made in brain pituitary 
    
   released to bloodstream 
 travel to
    
   target organ
Homeostasis and Levels of Organization
:
 
Unicellular
 
–  ONE cell is the entire organism (ex:  bacteria, protists)
    
-  internal cell environment is regulated by the whole cell
 
Multicellular
 – cells depend on jobs of other cells to regulate internal environment
    
-  cells need to be specialized in certain functions
    
-  cells must have ways of communicating with each other
 
Cell Communication
:
 
 - chemical signals picked up by receptors on target cell (ex:  hormones)
 
-  cell to cell connections (gap junctions) passageways for contents to share
 
Levels of Organization
:
 from simplest to most complex
cell
 tissue
 organ
 organ system
 organism
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Delve into the world of cell transport and homeostasis, exploring the functions of the cell membrane, the molecules involved, the fluid mosaic model, and passive transport mechanisms like diffusion, osmosis, and facilitated diffusion. Learn about the intricacies of maintaining equilibrium within cells.

  • Biology
  • Cell Transport
  • Homeostasis
  • Cell Membrane
  • Passive Transport

Uploaded on Sep 13, 2024 | 0 Views


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  1. Cell Transport and Homeostasis H Bio

  2. Cell Transport and the Cell Membrane Functions: Regulates what enters and leaves the cell Selectively Permeable allows only certain substances to enter and leave selects also called semi-permeable Aids in protection and support Contains and separates a cell from its environment Made of a phospholipid bilayer

  3. Cell Transport and the Cell Membrane Molecules found in the cell membrane (biological membranes) Lipids, mainly phospholipids, animal cells also contain the steroid cholesterol to aid in membrane fluidity. Proteins (receptor, enzyme, transport/channel, carrier) Carbohydrates chains that attach to membrane proteins (glycoproteins) or lipids (glycolipids) in the cell membrane serve as name/ID tags for cell to cell recognition

  4. Cell Transport and the Cell Membrane Fluid Mosaic Model Bilayer is fluid in nature with proteins embedded throughout Phospholipid Bilayer Contain a hydrophilic head and a nonpolar hydrophobic tail H bonds form between the phospholipids head and the watery environment inside and outside of the cell Hydrophobic interactions force the tails to face inward Phospholipids are not bonded to each other, making the layer fluid Cholesterol embedded in the membrane makes is stronger and less fluid

  5. Cell Transport and the Cell Membrane Passive Transport down a concentration gradient, no E Diffusion Osmosis Facilitated Diffusion

  6. 7.3 Cell Transport A) Passive Transport no energy required molecules from H L concentration * across a semi-permeable membrane until equilibrium is reached ex) FACILITATED DIFFUSION: use of protein channels (diffusion w/help) * to move charged molecules or large items move in/out * still from H L concentration (no energy needed) * ex) glucose, certain ions * ex) diffusion of water (OSMOSIS) thru semi-permeable membrane Different solution environments: HYPERTONIC = solution is high (hyper = above) in solute (ex: salt water) HYPOTONIC = solution is low (hypo = below) in solute (ex: fresh water) ISOTONIC = solution is a equilibrium with outside environment ex) DIFFUSION: movement of 1 2 3

  7. The Effect of Osmosis on Cells Cell shrinking = plasmolysis Cell swelling and bursting = cytolysis

  8. Cell Transport and the Cell Membrane Active Transport up/against gradient, required E (ATP) Membrane/Molecular Pumps Bulk Transport Endocytosis Exocytosis

  9. B) Active Transport energy needed to move items from LH concentration (against/up the concentration gradient) ex) molecular : small molecules and ions - moved through special protein channels - nerve cells use the Na/K pump (33% of all our energy!) ex) bulk: for very large items - requires cell membrane to change shape a) endocytosis cell membrane folds inward, brings item in * phagocytosis (cell eating) used by amoeba and WBC s * pinocytosis (cell drinking): packets of fluid brought inside cell b) exocytosis materials are released from the cell * vacuole fuses with membrane, contents released to outside * ex: hormones made in brain pituitary released to bloodstream travel to target organ

  10. Homeostasis and Levels of Organization: Unicellular ONE cell is the entire organism (ex: bacteria, protists) - internal cell environment is regulated by the whole cell Multicellular cells depend on jobs of other cells to regulate internal environment - cells need to be specialized in certain functions - cells must have ways of communicating with each other Cell Communication: - chemical signals picked up by receptors on target cell (ex: hormones) - cell to cell connections (gap junctions) passageways for contents to share Levels of Organization: from simplest to most complex cell tissue organ organ system organism

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