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Cell membrane transport involves the movement of substances across the cell membrane, regulating the entry and exit of ions, molecules, and nutrients. This dynamic process occurs through mechanisms such as diffusion, facilitated diffusion, active transport, and endocytosis/exocytosis, maintaining cellular homeostasis and supporting essential functions within the cell.
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โ Proteins act as passages for solutes โ (A) Liposome - protein free, artificial lipid bilayer โ (B) Cell membrane โ Solutes โ main thing that passes through the membrane proteins
โ Small, nonpolar molecules โ Dissolved readily โ Steroid hormones pass easily because they are derivatives of cholesterol โ Uncharged polar molecules โ Diffuse readily โ Dependent on size โ Charged molecules โ Cannot pass through (positively & negatively charged ions)
โ There are different charged ion in the cell: โ Some are increased intracellularly โ meaning they have high concentration inside the cell โ Potassium โ main intracellular cation, high concentration outside โ Some are increased extracellularly โ meaning they have high concentration outside the cell โ Sodium โ main extracellular cation, high concentration outside the cell โ Most anions are found in the extracellular matrix (outside the cell) โ Chlorine โ main extracellular anion โ Negatively charged
โ Voltage difference across the cell membrane caused by an imbalance of charged molecules โ Resting membrane potential โ -20 and -200 millivolts (mV) โ Uses: โ Transport of certain metabolites โ Using gradient transport โ Example: Neurons โ Cell-cell communication
โ Uses size and electric charge โ Non-selective
โ Uses binding sites โ Selective
โ The concentration gradient is dictating the movement of the solutes
LESSON 3: CELL ORGANIZATION โ Goes to the more concentrated to the less concentrated โ Happens naturally, no need to extend energy โ Two types of transport proteins: โ (1) Channel-mediated โ Hole inside cell membrane โ Uses its size & electrical charge โ Non-selective โ (2) Transport-mediated โ Uses binding sites โ Specific passive transport โ Selective
โ Pumps โ active transporters
โ Factor in play during transport
โ Net driving force of passive transport โ These two gradients are combined: โ Concentration gradient โ Membrane potential
the transfer of water across a membrane
โ (A) Protozoan โ keeps water in a vacuole and expels it outwards in a discharging contractile vacuole โ (B) Plant Cell โ welcomes water because of cell wall for the intracellular pressure called turgor โ (C) Animal Cell โ they donโt have cell wall, so they release ions & water accordingly
โ Characteristics: โ Ion selectivity โ Gated
โ Moves a solute along its electrochemical gradient โ Two types of Glucose: D & L Glucose โ Binds only D Glucose