NOTES: CH 7 part 2 - Transport Across the Cell Membrane (7.3-7.5)

The Permeability of the Lipid Bilayer

● Hydrophobic (nonpolar) molecules, such as hydrocarbons, can and pass through the membrane rapidly

● Polar molecules, such as sugars,

Transport proteins:

● membrane proteins that transport across biological membranes:

-may provide

-may bind to a substance and physically move it across the membrane

-

Movement across the cell membrane can be:

1) PASSIVE

2) ACTIVE

● energy-requiring process during which a transport protein pumps a molecule across a membrane, against its

conc. gradient; is energetically “uphill”

7.3 - PASSIVE TRANSPORT (types):

DIFFUSION: net movement of a substance down a concentration gradient

-results from

-results from random molecular movement

-continues until (molecules continue to move but there is no net directional movement)

OSMOSIS:

●; water moves down its concentration gradient

-continues

-at equil. water molecules move in both directions at same rate

Effects of Osmosis on Water Balance

● The direction of osmosis is determined only by a difference in total solute concentration

● Water diffuses across a membrane from the region of to the region of

Water Balance of Cells Without Walls

Isotonic solution: as that inside the cell; no net water movement across the plasma membrane

Hypertonic solution: solute concentration is greater than that inside the cell;

Hypotonic solution: solute concentration is less than that inside the cell;

WATER MOVES FROM HYPO TO HYPERTONIC!!!

● Animals and other organisms without rigid cell walls have osmotic problems in either a hypertonic or hypotonic environment

● To maintain their internal environment, such organisms must have adaptations for , the control of water balance

● The protist Paramecium, which is hypertonic to its pond water environment, has a contractile vacuole that acts as a pump

Water Balance of Cells with Walls

● Cell walls help maintain water balance

● A plant cell in a hypotonic solution swells until the wall opposes uptake; (firm)

● If a plant cell and its surroundings are isotonic, there is no net movement of water into the cell; the cell becomes flaccid (limp), and the plant may wilt

● In a hypertonic environment, ; eventually, the membrane , a usually lethal effect called plasmolysis

RECAP:In cells with cell walls:

● in a HYPERTONIC environment, occurs; cells shrivel and usually die

● in a HYPOTONIC environment, , causing it to swell; cell becomes more TURGID.

FACILITATED DIFFUSION:

● diffusion of solutes across a membrane, ;

Channel proteins provide corridors that allow a specific molecule or ion to cross the membrane

Carrier proteins undergo a subtle change in shape that translocates the solute-binding site across the membrane

7.4 - Active transport uses energy to move solutes against their gradients

● Facilitated diffusion is still passive because the solute moves down its concentration gradient

● Some transport proteins, however, can move solutes against their concentration gradients

The Need for Energy in Active Transport

● Active transport moves substances

● Active transport requires energy, usually in the

● Active transport is performed by specific proteins embedded in the membranes

Examples of Active Transport protein “pumps”:

1) Sodium-Potassium Pump:

-actively pumps Na+ ions out / K+ ions in

-in every pump cycle,

-Na+ and K+ are moved against their gradients (both concentration and electric potential!)

Maintenance of Membrane Potential by Ion Pumps

● Membrane potential is the voltage difference across a membrane

● Two combined forces, collectively called the , drive the diffusion of ions across a membrane:

-A (the ion’s concentration gradient)

-An (the effect of the membrane potential on the ion’s movement)

●Membrane Potential: voltage across membrane; in most cells the interior is negatively charged w/respect to outside

-favors diffusion of cations into cell and anions out of cell

●Electrochemical Gradient: diffusion gradient resulting from the

**The Na+-K+ pump maintains the membrane potential…HOW?** (Think about it!)

ELECTROGENIC PUMPS:

● An electrogenic pump is a transport protein that

● The main electrogenic pump of plants, fungi, and bacteria is a .

2) Proton Pump: pumps protons (H+ ions) out of the cell, creating a proton gradient (protons are more concentrated outside the membrane than inside)…this is an energetically “uphill” process!

-protons then diffuse back into cell

-the force of the proton pushing back through the membrane is used to power the production of ATP

3) Cotransport / Coupled Channels: process where a single ATP-powered pump actively transports one solute and indirectly drives the transport of other solutes against their conc. gradients.

-Example:

7.5 - Bulk transport across the plasma membrane occurs by exocytosis and endocytosis

● Small molecules and water enter or leave the cell through the lipid bilayer or by transport proteins

● Large molecules, such as polysaccharides and proteins,

BULK TRANSPORT also includes….EXOCYTOSIS & ENDOCYTOSIS:

● transport of large molecules (e.g. proteins and polysaccharides) across cell membrane

Exocytosis / Endocytosis
* macromolecules by fusion of vesicles cromolecules by w/the plasma membrane
* vesicle buds from ER or Golgi and migrates to plasma membrane
* used by secretory cells to export products (e.g. . ) / * macromolecules by forming vesicles derived from plasma membrane
* vesicle forms in localized region of plasma membrane
* used by cells to incorporate extracellular substances (e.g. macrophage )

EXOCYTOSIS

● In exocytosis, transport vesicles migrate to the membrane,

fuse with it, and release their contents

ENDOCYTOSIS

● In endocytosis, the cell takes in macromolecules by forming vesicles from the plasma membrane

● Endocytosis is a reversal of exocytosis, involving different proteins

Three types of Endocytosis:

1) Phagocytosis: part of the cell membrane engulfs large particles or even entire cells ()

2) Pinocytosis: part of the cell membrane engulfs small dissolved substances or fluid droplets in vesicles

()

3) Receptor-Mediated Endocytosis: importing of specific macromolecules by receptor proteins bind to a specific substance which triggers the inward budding of vesicles formed from (how mammalian cells take up cholesterol)