MOVEMENT IN AND OUT OF A CELL CELL MEMBRANE PLASMA MEMBRANE.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Cell Membrane, Transport, Enzymes, & Energy
Advertisements

CP BIO: Ch. 7 The Cell Membrane
Chapter 5: Biological Membranes
Chap. 5: Homeostasis and the Cell Membrane --- Homeostasis – steady state of balance between a cell and its environment.
#1 Which part of all cells is responsible for regulating which substances enter or exit the cell? a. cell wall b. nuclear membrane c. cell membrane d.
The Plasma (Cell) Membrane The Fluid Mosaic Model.
Homeostasis, Transport & The Cell Membrane Chapter 4-2 (pg 73 – 75) Chapter 5.
I. The Plasma Membrane Quiz:. 1. Controls what comes in and out of the cell. It is selectively permeable. Cell Membrane.
Moving Through the Plasma Membrane
Cell Transport Biology Review ATP is the molecule used for energy made by the cell 2 1.True 2.False 10.
Chapter 4 Cells and their Environment
HOMEOSTASIS AND TRANSPORT
1 2 Homeostasis 3 Osmosis 4 Facilitated Diffusion.
Transport Passive and Active. Passive Transport  Passive transport is any transport that occurs without the use of energy.  Ex:  Diffusion  Osmosis.
Cellular Transport.
maintaining homeostasis
The Plasma Membrane and Homeostasis FLUID MOSAIC MODEL.
maintaining homeostasis
Moving through the Plasma Membrane. What does a phospholipid look like?
NOTES CHAPTER 5 CELL TRANSPORT PASSIVE TRANSPORT Movement of a substance through a cell’s membrane without use of cell energy (ATP)
Structure of the Plasma Membrane Lipid bilayer – two sheets of lipids (phospholipids). – Found around the cell, the nucleus, vacuoles, mitochondria, and.
Chapter 4: Cells and Their Environment
Facilitated Diffusion Active Transport
Chapter 4 Membrane Structure and Function. Plasma Membrane.
Movement of Materials In and Out of a Cell
MOVEMENT IN AND OUT OF A CELL CELL MEMBRANE PLASMA MEMBRANE.
Cellular Transport. Objectives: -Summarize the structure & function of the plasma membrane -Summarize passive transport and the four main types -Summarize.
MOVEMENT IN AND OUT OF A CELL CELL MEMBRANE PLASMA MEMBRANE.
Exchange with the Environment Cell Transport. Cell Processes For a cell to survive, it must get nutrients and water. It must also get rid of wastes How.
The Plasma Membrane and Homeostasis Homeostasis – Maintaining a Balance Cells must keep the proper concentration of nutrients and water and eliminate.
Cell Transport Movement through the Membrane. Crossing the Cell Membrane To stay alive, a cell must exchange materials such as food and wastes with its.
Bio I Rupp.  Why do cells transport materials?  What are the two main methods of cell transport and how do they differ?  What are homeostasis and equilibrium?
CHAPTER 3 SECTION 3-1 TO 3-4. LIVING SYSTEMS AS COMPARTMENTS  P
Biology.  Cell Membranes and Homeostasis  Passive Transport Diffusion Facilitated Diffusion Osmosis  Active Transport Molecular Transport Bulk Transport.
Chapter 5 Review Sheet. Type of transport where substances enter and leave the cell WITHOUT using energy ► Passive transport.
The Cell Membrane Cell Membrane – boundary that separates cells from their environment and controls what moves in and out of the cell.
Membrane Transport: Passive & Active See in your book See the handout.
Cell Membrane & Transport Cells maintain homeostasis (balance) by transporting substances across the membrane.
Homeostasis & Transport
Transport Across Cell Membranes
The Cell Membrane Lipids Proteins Also called the plasma membrane.
Structure of the Cell Membrane
Plasma Membrane & Homeostasis
Cell Transport / Membrane Notes
Homeostasis and Transport
Homeostasis and Transport
Cellular Membrane Notes
Cellular Transport Yeast cells stained with fluorescent dye
Cell Transport Yeast cells stained with fluorescent dye
Structure Fits Function The Plasma Membrane
Cell Membrane Part 1.
Cell Membrane Part 1.
Cell Membrane & Transport
Cellular Transport Notes
Cellular Transport Notes
Lipid Structure Plasma Membrane Cell Transport Cell Communication
CELLULAR TRANSPORT.
Transport through the Cell Membrane
Structure of the Cell membrane
Cellular Transport.
Movement through a Cell Membrane
Bellringer Review your organelle note chart. Will be taking a self quiz over the cell organelles.
Cell Membrane & Transport
Cell Membranes and Transport
Transport Across The Membrane
Cell Transport Notes.
Moving Cellular Materials
Osmosis, Diffusion, Active Transport
The Plasma Membrane and Homeostasis FLUID MOSAIC MODEL
Moving Cellular Materials
Presentation transcript:

MOVEMENT IN AND OUT OF A CELL CELL MEMBRANE PLASMA MEMBRANE

TYPES OF TRANSPORT Passive Transport “LAZY” No energy (ATP) required Controlled by the movement of molecules Active Transport “HIGH ENERGY” Energy (ATP) Required Controlled by the cell

What is DIFFUSION?  Concen- tration gradient  No energy  High to low

Until Equilibrium Is reached

Concentration Gradient Salt Water WATER SALT Cover on

What is OSMOSIS? Diffusion of water Water moves from high to low du/class/ryan/pass ive.html WATER Lots of Water Here Not Lots of Water Here

What is the function of membrane? Homeostasis Controls movement of materials in and out of cell Do you remember what organic molecule the membrane is made of?

Lipid Phosphate head Lipids: Phospholipids

Phospholipid Bilayer

FLUID- MOSAIC MODEL

ALSO CONTAINS: proteins: transport, identification, glue cholesterol: used to help keep it “solid” Carbo: cell to cell contact (glycoproteins)

Outside of Cell Inside of Cell

PASSABLE Monomers: amino acids, glucose, glycerol, F.A. H 2 O, CO 2, O 2,

NON-PASSABLE Polymers: starch, proteins, triglycerides charged ions (Na +, Cl - )

What happens when a cell is placed in a solution with the same concentration as inside the cell? Normal Red Blood Cells ISOTONIC SOLUTION The cells stay the same size

What happens when an animal cell is placed in pure water? HYPOTONIC SOLUTION The cells swell Swollen Red Blood Cells

What happens to plants in a hypotonic solution? Plant cell placed in pure water? Will not rupture due to cell wall Turgor Pressure Video

Water Vacuole

Contractile Vacuoles

What happens to an animal cell placed in salt water? HYPERTONIC SOLULTION The cells shrivel up Shriveled Red Blood Cells

Plants in a hypertonic Solution Plant cell placed in salt water? Cytoplasm and membrane shrivel up Cell wall remains in place Plasmolysis

Osmosis in an animal Cell

Osmosis in a Plant Cell

Facilitated Diffusion Faster with help of a protein No chemical reaction NO ENERGY needed! Examples: enzymes and glucose

Facilitated diffusion is very specific

ACTIVE TRANSPORT

What if you need to get molecules to go against diffusion?

Against the concentration gradient Uses energy to “pump” molecules in (or out)

What if the food is too big to fit through the cell membrane? ENDOCYTOSIS 2 TYPES

PHAGOCYTOSIS PSEUDOPODS: false-foot Creates a food vacuole Pinocytosis: cell drinking, small particles

Feeding using pseudopodia (Phagocytosis) You Tube W6rnhiMxtKU&feature=related

What is needed to digest another cell after it is eaten?

Stores strong digestive enzymes

Lysosomes are created from the Golgi Apparatus.

Golgi Body

ntent/animations/content/vesiclebu dding.html

EXOCYTOSIS Cell egestion Removal of undigested food Vacuole moves to edge of cytoplasm and opens up Opposite of endocytosis What must a cell do with undigested waste?

Exocytosis