II. Movement of Materials through Cell Membrane. Selectively permeable membrane- AAAAllows some materials to pass and not others.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Moving Cellular Materials
Advertisements

Cells and Their Environment
Cellular Transport.
Maintaining Cellular Homeostasis How do organisms regulate their body’s internal environment?
Transport of substances across a membrane without any input of energy by the cell. a. Diffusion b. Osmosis.
How do things move in and out of cells?
Osmosis.  Energy requirements?  No energy required  Modes of passive transport?  Diffusion through cell membrane  The movement of a substance from.
Osmosis.
Homeostasis and Cell Transport
Homeostasis and Transport
Passive Transport 1. Diffusion 2.Osmosis 3.Facilitated Diffusion.
Chapter 7.3 Cell Transport
Cell Membrane Transport Notes
Facilitated Diffusion Active Transport
Chapter 3. Passive Transport  Diffusion – molecules move spontaneously (no energy used) from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration.
Diffusion The movement of molecules from an area of high concentration to an area of low. concentration.
Types of Transport Review. The movement of particles against the direction of diffusion requiring cell energy. ACTIVE TRANSPORT.
Getting In & Out of a Cell Osmosis & Diffusion Getting In & Out of a Cell Osmosis & Diffusion.
Chapter 2 Lesson 3 Moving Cellular Materials. Cell Membrane The cell membrane is selectively permeable ◦ It allows certain things into the cell while.
Cell Transport Ch. 7.3 & 7.4.
Movement Through The Cell Membrane. How Things Move in and Out of the Cell The cell membrane is selectively permeable, allowing some substances, but not.
Notes Cells need to regulate what moves in and out of them,in order to maintain homeostasis. The cell membrane is in charge of what comes and goes. The.
Passive vs. Active Transport. Passive Transport Does NOT require energy Moves substances from higher to lower concentration.
Moving Cellular Material Chapter 2, Lesson 3. Membranes Control the movement of materials in and out of cell. – Semipermeable – only certain substances.
PASSIVE TRANSPORT One way cells maintain homeostasis is by controlling the movement of substances across their cell membrane. Cells want to reach “equilibrium”.
Chapter 5 Notes Homeostasis and Cell Transport. Diffusion The movement of molecules from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration.
 Cell transport is the movement of particles and it takes place because cells are trying to maintain balance (homeostasis).
Cellular Transport Molecules moving across the cell membrane Cell Membrane is selectively permeable (lets some things in, some things out, but not everything)
Cell Transport Crossing the Plasma Membrane. Plasma Membrane Phospholipid bilayer with proteins and cholesterol molecules scattered throughout Selectively.
MOVING CELLULAR MATERIAL Chapter 10 Lesson 3. Essential Questions How do materials enter and leave cells? How does cell size affect the transport of materials?
Cell Membrane Transport Notes
Osmosis, Diffusion, Active Transport
Chapter 8: Cellular Transport and the Cell Cycle
Cellular Transport Across the Membrane
Structure and Function
Structure, Function, and Transport
Movement Through the Cell Membrane
Passive Transport: Diffusion & Osmosis 3.4
Movement Through the Cell Membrane
Membrane Transport.
Ch. 5 – Homeostasis & Transport
PASSIVE AND ACTIVE TRANSPORT IN CELLS
Ch. 7: The Structure & Function of Cells
Cellular Transport Biology 2017.
Section Objectives Predict the movement of water and other molecules across selectively permeable membranes. (SPI ) Compare and contrast.
PASSIVE TRANSPORT One way cells maintain homeostasis is by controlling the movement of substances across their cell membrane. Cells want to reach “equilibrium”.
Cellular Physiology TRANSPORT.
CELL MEMBRANES HELP ORGANISMS MAINTAIN HOMEOSTASIS BY CONTROLLING WHAT SUBSTANCES MAY ENTER OR LEAVE THE CELLS.
Structure of the Cell membrane
Cellular Transportation
PASSIVE TRANSPORT One way cells maintain homeostasis is by controlling the movement of substances across their cell membrane. Cells want to reach “equilibrium”.
Movement of particles across the cell membrane without using energy
Moving Cellular Material
They are SEMI-PERMEABLE Selectively Permeable
7.3 Cell Transport p208 Passive Transport- Mvt. Of materials across cell membrane without energy. Type is: Diffusion-high to low Equilibrium-equal.
Movement Through a Membrane
Movement through a Cell Membrane
Facilitated Diffusion:
Cell transport: Diffusion and Osmosis
Cell Processes 7th 15.2 Cell Transport.
How things get in and out of cells.
Homeostasis and Cell Transport
BELLWORK What are the three organelles that only plants have?
Movement Across Membranes
Cells and Their Environment
Movement of particles across the cell membrane without using energy
PHAGOCYTOSIS ENDOCYTOSIS EXOCYTOSIS PINOCYTOSIS
Chapter 3, Part 2 Notes 3.4 Diffusion and Osmosis
Chapter 7 – Cell Structure & Function
Cell Transport Chapter 7, section 3
Presentation transcript:

II. Movement of Materials through Cell Membrane

Selectively permeable membrane- AAAAllows some materials to pass and not others

Passive Transport  Moving from high  low concentration  No energy required

Diffusion-  Molecules of a substance move from an area of higher to an area of lower concentration  High  Low

Equilibrium-  Concentration of the molecules will be the same throughout the space they occupy

Osmosis-  The diffusion of water across a semi- permeable membrane

Direction of Osmosis  a. Equal water concentration inside and outside cell, cell remains the same (p 99)  b. High water concentration outside cell, water diffuses in, cell swells (p 99)  c. High water concentration inside cell, water diffuses out, cell shrinks (p 99)

Facilitated Diffusion (p 101)  Moving from high  low concentration  No energy required  Carrier molecule is required

Active Transport EEEEnergy is required TTTTwo types –1–1–1–1. low  high concentration

Movement in Vesicles (p 105)  Endocytosis- cell engulfing substance  Phagocytosis- engulfing solids Pinocytosis- engulfing liquids

Movement in Vesicles (p106)  Exocytosis-  Release of a substance from a cell  Opposite of endocytosis

Levels of Organization  Cell  Tissue  Organ  Organ System  Organism