3.5 Passive Transport
3.5 Passive Transport
- By the end of this section, you will be able to explain why and how passive transport occurs.
- Some substances are allowed but not others.
- The cell would no longer be able to sustain itself if they lost this selectivity.
- Some cells need more specific substances than others, and they need a way to get them from the extracellular fluids.
- As certain materials move back and forth, or as the cell has special mechanisms that ensure transport, this may happen passive.
- Most cells use most of their energy to create and maintain an even distribution of ion on the opposite side of their membranes.
- There are some problems with the structure of the plasma membrane.
- Passive forms of transport are the most direct.
- In passive transport, substances move from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration.
- The asymmetric nature of the membranes means that the interior is not the same as the exterior.
- There are channels or pumps that work in one direction.
- Carbohydrates are found on the exterior surface of the cell.
- The cell uses these complexes to bind things in the fluid.
- It adds to the nature of the membranes.
- There are two regions in the plasma membranes.
- The characteristic helps the movement of certain materials and hinders the movement of others.
- The material can easily slip through the core.
- Substances such as the fat-soluble vitamins A, D, E, and K can be found in the body.
- Fat-soluble drugs are readily transported into the body's tissues and organs.
- Oxygen and carbon dioxide have no charge.
- Some polar molecules can connect with the outside of a cell, but they can't pass through the core of the cell.
- Small ion can easily slip through the spaces in the mosaic, but their charge prevents them from doing so.
- Ions such as sodium, potassium, calcium, and chloride must have special means of penetrating.
- Simple sugars need help with transport.
- When the concentration is equal across the space, a single substance tends to move from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration.
- You are familiar with air movement.
- Imagine a person opening a bottle of perfume in a room filled with people.
- The perfume is at its highest concentration in the bottle and lowest at the edges of the room.
- As the perfume diffuses from the bottle, more and more people will smell the perfume as it spreads.
- The materials move within the cell's cytosol by diffusion.
- The different concentrations of materials in different areas are a form of potential energy that can be dissipated as materials move down their concentration gradients.
- A substance can be moved from an area of high concentration to one of low concentration with the help of a permeable membrane.
- The concentration of different substances in the same medium has their own concentration.
- The substance will diffuse according to the gradient.
- There are a number of factors that affect the rate of diffusion.
- The slower the rate of diffusion becomes, the closer the distribution of the material gets to equilibrium.
- The mass of the molecule diffuses more slowly if it is more difficult for them to move between the substance they are moving through.
- The movement of the molecule increases when the temperature is higher.
- The slower the molecule is, the harder it is to get through the denser medium.
- The substances that are transported through the air would not diffuse easily or quickly.
- The solution to moving polar substances and other substances is dependent on the proteins that span its surface.
- The material being transported is first attached to the surface of the cell.
- The material that is needed by the cell can be removed.
- The substances are passed through channels or pores that allow them to pass through the membranes.
- The transport proteins are either channels for the material or the carriers, and they are collectively referred to as transport proteins.
- Osmosis is a special case.
- Imagine a beaker with a semipermeable separator.
- If the volume of the water is the same, but the concentrations of solute are different, there are also different concentrations of water on either side of the membranes.
- Water always moves from an area of higher concentration to one of lower concentration.
- In this system, the solute cannot pass through a barrier.
- The principle of diffusion is that the Molecules will spread evenly throughout the Medium if they can move around.
- Only the material that can diffuse through it will do so.
- The water can diffuse the solute in this example.
- This system has a concentration of water.
- Water will diffuse to the side where it is less concentrated.
- The concentration of water in the air will continue until it goes to zero.
- In living systems, Osmosis proceeds constantly.
- There is a video that shows the difference between hot and cold solutions.
- Hypotonic, isotonic, and hypertonic are three terms used to describe the osmolarity of a cell.
- The cell has a lower concentration of water than the extracellular fluid.
- Water will enter the cell in this situation.
- This can cause an animal cell to burst.
- The fluid has a higher concentration of solutes than the cell's cytoplasm, so it contains less water.
- The water will leave the cell.
- The water is being drawn out of the cell by the solute.
- An animal cell may be damaged.
- There will be no net movement of water into or out of the cell if the concentration of solutes of the cell matches that of the extracellular fluid.
- The features of blood cells in hypotonic, isotonic, and hypertonic solutions are shown in Figure 3.22.
- Red blood cells in hypertonic, isotonic, and hypotonic solutions have their shape changed by osmotic pressure.
- A doctor injects a patient with a solution that isotonic.
- An autopsy shows that many red blood cells have been destroyed.
- Some organisms, such as plants, fungi,bacteria, and some protists, have cell walls that surround the plasma membrane and prevent cell lysis.
- The cell won't lyse because the cell can only expand to the limit of the wall.
- Water will always enter a cell if water is available, and the cytoplasm in plants is slightly hypertonic compared to the cellular environment.
- This influx of water stiffens the cell walls of the plant.
- Turgor pressure supports the plant in nonwoody plants.
- Water will leave the cell if it becomes hypertonic or if a plant is not watered adequately.
- Plants lose turgor pressure in this situation.
- Turgor pressure within a plant cell depends on the tonicity of the solution that it is bathed in.