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The Cell and Its Surroundings Cell Membrane Transport Cell Junctions.

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Presentation on theme: "The Cell and Its Surroundings Cell Membrane Transport Cell Junctions."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Cell and Its Surroundings Cell Membrane Transport Cell Junctions

2 Cell Membrane Provides protection and support Regulates what enters and leaves Composed of a double-layered sheet called a lipid bilayer

3 Cell Membrane Structure Composed mostly of phospholipids and proteins Phospholipids have hydrophilic “water- loving” region (heads) and hydrophobic “water-fearing” region (tails) Proteins are embedded throughout

4 Cell Membrane Structure Peripheral proteins sit on the surface Integral proteins are embedded in the middle layer Many proteins have carbohydrate molecules attached

5 Cell Membrane Structure Fluid Mosaic Model

6 Transport The cytoplasm is a solution of many substances in water This creates a concentration gradient – different concentrations inside and out  Concentration = mass solute/volume solvent Remember: Molecules will naturally move from high to low concentration – “downhill”

7 Diffusion Particles move from high concentration to low concentration Equilibrium – when concentration is the same inside and out  Particles still move at this point, but if one goes in, one usually goes out at the same time. (no directional movement)

8 Osmosis Some substances are too large to pass through the membrane (impermeable) Water passes quite easily (permeable) through a membrane Osmosis is the diffusion of water through a selectively permeable membrane

9 Osmosis As the water moves from high to low, it causes the right side to rise Remember: Salt Sucks  Draws water in its direction  “Salt” can be any Solute!

10 Solutions and Osmosis Isotonic – concentrations of water and solute are the same Hypertonic – higher concentration of solute (low water) Hypotonic – lower concentration of solute (high water) (These terms always refer to solute!)

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12 Passive Transport Does not require energy  Includes diffusion and osmosis Also includes facilitated diffusion – carrier proteins in the membrane help larger molecules pass through

13 Facilitated Diffusion

14 Active Transport Sometimes cells must move materials in the opposite direction – against the concentration gradient (low to high) - “uphill” This requires energy Carried out by protein “pumps” in the cell membrane

15 Active Molecular Transport Proteins are used to move small molecules such as calcium, potassium, and sodium ions across the membrane Use of energy enables cells to concentrate substances in a particular area

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17 Other Types of Active Transport Endocytosis – cell takes in large molecules by creating pockets and engulfing them  Phagocytosis – “cell eating;” extensions of cytoplasm surround food particle, packages it within a food vacuole and cell engulfs it Used by ameobas  Pinocytosis – tiny pockets along the membrane fill with liquid and pinch off; used to take in liquid Exocytosis – opposite of endocytosis; cell removes materials

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19 Cell Junctions Connect one cell to another Three major types in vertebrates:  Desmosomes – spot welds that hold cells together  Tight junctions – seals around cells to prevent leakage  Gap junctions – very small channels that allow ions and other small substances to pass from cell to cell

20 Cell Junctions Plasmodesmata – (plant cells only) extend through pores in the cell wall connecting the cytoplasm of each cell to neighboring cells.


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