Membranes and Diffusion Cell Membranes Phospholipids have two
Membranes and Diffusion
Cell Membranes • Phospholipids have two regions: – Polar head is hydrophilic, meaning it plays well with water – Nonpolar tails (fatty acid chains) are hydrophobic, meaning they avoid water at all costs
Cell Membranes • Phospholipids are arranged in a bilayer that surrounds the cell • The heads are on the outside and inside of the cell • The tails are buried between the heads
What makes up membranes? 1. Phospholipids – create the main barrier 2. Proteins – channels and receptors (to receive signals from other cells) 3. Carbohydrates – ID tags (to say what kind of cell it is and who the cell belongs to)
Membranes aren’t stiff! • The membrane components move around, so we say they’re fluid! • http: //www. stolaf. edu/people/giannini/fla shanimat/lipids/membrane%20 fluidity. swf
What do membranes do? • Keep bad things out • Let needed things in • Let wastes out • Maintain homeostasis (what is that again? ? )
How do things get through the membrane? • Diffusion – the movement of molecules from an area of high to low concentration • Concentration gradient – a difference in concentration from one place to another
Types of diffusion • Simple diffusion – movement of a particle through the membrane (O 2, CO 2, nonpolar things) • Facilitated diffusion – movement of a particle through a protein channel (polar things)
Types of Diffusion • Osmosis – movement of water through the membrane • When the particle (solute) can’t move through the membrane, water moves instead
Osmosis • Terms to compare external and internal environment of the cell • Isotonic solutions – same concentration of solute as inside the cell • Water moves equally in both directions 5% Na. Cl 95% water
Osmosis • Hypertonic solutions – higher concentration of solute, lower concentration of water than cell • More water moves out of the cell than into it (to dilute the high salt outside? ? ) 5% Na. Cl 95% water 20% Na. Cl 80% water
Osmosis • Hypotonic solutions – lower concentration of solute, higher concentration of water than cell • More water moves into the cell than out of it (to dilute the high salt inside? ? ) 5% Na. Cl 95% water 0% Na. Cl 100% water
Active Transport • Requires energy • Particles do not necessarily move from high to low concentration • Can be through a protein pump
Active Transport • Phagocytosis – membrane reaches out and grabs food (larger particles) • Pinocytosis – membrane folds inward (smaller particles/water) • Exocytosis – vesicle fuses with outer membrane, pushing particles out
- Slides: 14