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AP Bio Chap 7 Osmosis and Diffusion. So, how does a membrane regulates what goes in and out? Depends...

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AP Bio Chap 7 Osmosis and Diffusion
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Page 1: AP Bio Chap 7 Osmosis and Diffusion. So, how does a membrane regulates what goes in and out? Depends on: 1)Lipid solubility - Hydrophobic molecules, such.

AP Bio Chap 7Osmosis and Diffusion

Page 2: AP Bio Chap 7 Osmosis and Diffusion. So, how does a membrane regulates what goes in and out? Depends on: 1)Lipid solubility - Hydrophobic molecules, such.

So, how does a membrane regulates what goes in and out?

Depends on:1) Lipid solubility - Hydrophobic molecules, such as hydrocarbons, O2, CO2

pass freely - Ions, polar molecules need transport molecules (proteins)

with hydrophilic channels or actually bind to the carrier protein to pass through

- Aquaporins facilitate water passage2) Size of the molecule3) Concentration of the molecule

Page 3: AP Bio Chap 7 Osmosis and Diffusion. So, how does a membrane regulates what goes in and out? Depends on: 1)Lipid solubility - Hydrophobic molecules, such.

Cell membranes are semipermeable.

Page 4: AP Bio Chap 7 Osmosis and Diffusion. So, how does a membrane regulates what goes in and out? Depends on: 1)Lipid solubility - Hydrophobic molecules, such.

Types of transport: PASSIVE TRANSPORT – no energy required

1) Diffusion - movement of a substance from greater to lesser concentration (down its concentration gradient)

• will continue until dynamic equilibrium; no more NET movement

• most common method of movement for nonpolar molecules across the membrane

• most efficient when large surface area, well-defined concentration gradient, short distance.

Page 5: AP Bio Chap 7 Osmosis and Diffusion. So, how does a membrane regulates what goes in and out? Depends on: 1)Lipid solubility - Hydrophobic molecules, such.

Diffusion

Page 6: AP Bio Chap 7 Osmosis and Diffusion. So, how does a membrane regulates what goes in and out? Depends on: 1)Lipid solubility - Hydrophobic molecules, such.

Molecules of dye

Fig. 7-11a

Membrane (cross section)

WATER

Net diffusion Net diffusion

(a) Diffusion of one solute

Equilibrium

Page 7: AP Bio Chap 7 Osmosis and Diffusion. So, how does a membrane regulates what goes in and out? Depends on: 1)Lipid solubility - Hydrophobic molecules, such.

(b) Diffusion of two solutes

Fig. 7-11b

Net diffusion

Net diffusion

Net diffusion

Net diffusion

Equilibrium

Equilibrium

The diffusion of one solute is unaffected by the diffusion of another solute.

Page 8: AP Bio Chap 7 Osmosis and Diffusion. So, how does a membrane regulates what goes in and out? Depends on: 1)Lipid solubility - Hydrophobic molecules, such.

2) Osmosis is the diffusion of water across a selectively permeable membrane

• Water diffuses across a membrane from the region of lower solute concentration to the region of higher solute concentration

• Direction of water flow is determined by the number (not kinds) of solute particles (molecules and ions)

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings

Page 9: AP Bio Chap 7 Osmosis and Diffusion. So, how does a membrane regulates what goes in and out? Depends on: 1)Lipid solubility - Hydrophobic molecules, such.

Lowerconcentrationof solute (sugar)

Fig. 7-12

H2O

Higher concentrationof sugar

Selectivelypermeablemembrane

Same concentrationof sugar

Osmosis

Page 10: AP Bio Chap 7 Osmosis and Diffusion. So, how does a membrane regulates what goes in and out? Depends on: 1)Lipid solubility - Hydrophobic molecules, such.

Fig. 7-UN3

Environment:0.01 M sucrose

0.01 M glucose

0.01 M fructose

“Cell”

0.03 M sucrose

0.02 M glucose

What will happen here if the sucrose cannot diffuse? Glucose, fructose, and water can.

Page 11: AP Bio Chap 7 Osmosis and Diffusion. So, how does a membrane regulates what goes in and out? Depends on: 1)Lipid solubility - Hydrophobic molecules, such.

Fig. 7-UN4

Page 12: AP Bio Chap 7 Osmosis and Diffusion. So, how does a membrane regulates what goes in and out? Depends on: 1)Lipid solubility - Hydrophobic molecules, such.

Water Balance of Cells Without Walls

• Tonicity is the ability of a solution to cause a cell to gain or lose water

• Isotonic solution: Solute concentration is the same as that inside the cell; no NET water movement across the plasma membrane

• Hypertonic solution: Solute concentration is greater than that inside the cell; cell loses water

• Hypotonic solution: Solute concentration is less than that inside the cell; cell gains water

Page 13: AP Bio Chap 7 Osmosis and Diffusion. So, how does a membrane regulates what goes in and out? Depends on: 1)Lipid solubility - Hydrophobic molecules, such.
Page 14: AP Bio Chap 7 Osmosis and Diffusion. So, how does a membrane regulates what goes in and out? Depends on: 1)Lipid solubility - Hydrophobic molecules, such.

REMEMBER!

WATER ALWAYS FLOWS INTO A HYPERTONIC SITUATION!

WATER ALWAYS FLOWS INTO A HYPERTONIC SITUATION!

Page 15: AP Bio Chap 7 Osmosis and Diffusion. So, how does a membrane regulates what goes in and out? Depends on: 1)Lipid solubility - Hydrophobic molecules, such.

What happens to animal cells in the following situations?

• Hypertonic environment – lose water, shrivel• Hypotonic environment – water moves in, cell

swell and possibly bust• Adaptations to contend with this: - contractile vacuoles in protists - membranes less permeable to water - isotonic internal conditions to their

environment

Page 16: AP Bio Chap 7 Osmosis and Diffusion. So, how does a membrane regulates what goes in and out? Depends on: 1)Lipid solubility - Hydrophobic molecules, such.

Fig. 7-13

Hypotonic solution

(a) Animal cell

(b) Plant cell

H2O

Lysed

H2O

Turgid (normal)

H2O

H2O

H2O

H2O

Normal

Isotonic solution

Flaccid

H2O

H2O

Shriveled

Plasmolyzed

Hypertonic solution

Page 17: AP Bio Chap 7 Osmosis and Diffusion. So, how does a membrane regulates what goes in and out? Depends on: 1)Lipid solubility - Hydrophobic molecules, such.

Fig. 7-14

Filling vacuole 50 µm

(a) A contractile vacuole fills with fluid that enters from a system of canals radiating throughout the cytoplasm.

Contracting vacuole

(b) When full, the vacuole and canals contract, expelling fluid from the cell.

Page 18: AP Bio Chap 7 Osmosis and Diffusion. So, how does a membrane regulates what goes in and out? Depends on: 1)Lipid solubility - Hydrophobic molecules, such.

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; the cell is now turgid (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, plant cells lose water; eventually, the membrane pulls away from the wall, a usually lethal effect called plasmolysis

Page 19: AP Bio Chap 7 Osmosis and Diffusion. So, how does a membrane regulates what goes in and out? Depends on: 1)Lipid solubility - Hydrophobic molecules, such.

???• The ideal environment for animal cells is

________________________.• The ideal environment for plant cells is

________________________.

Page 20: AP Bio Chap 7 Osmosis and Diffusion. So, how does a membrane regulates what goes in and out? Depends on: 1)Lipid solubility - Hydrophobic molecules, such.

• Hypertonic or hypotonic environments create osmotic problems for organisms

• Osmoregulation, the control of water balance, is a necessary adaptation for life in such environments

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