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October 30, 2007

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Diffussion, thermodiffusion. Biological role of diffusion Osmosis, chemiosmosis. The microscopic transport of material. October 30, 2007. Lustyik. Examples for the biological role of diffusion. 2. = 6D t. D. R. R = 1 cm:. 8300 s (2 h 18 m). R = 3 m m (E. coli):. 7.5 x 10 -5 s. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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October 30, October 30, 2007 2007 Lustyi k Diffussion, thermodiffusion. Diffussion, thermodiffusion. Biological role of Biological role of diffusion diffusion Osmosis, chemiosmosis Osmosis, chemiosmosis The microscopic transport of material
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Page 1: October  30,  2007

October 30, 2007October 30, 2007

Lustyik

Diffussion, thermodiffusion.Diffussion, thermodiffusion.

Biological role of diffusionBiological role of diffusionOsmosis, chemiosmosisOsmosis, chemiosmosis

The microscopic transport of material

Page 2: October  30,  2007

Examples for the biological Examples for the biological role of diffusionrole of diffusion

Page 3: October  30,  2007

Motion of small molecules:

Diffusion of water in water: D = 2 x 10-9 m2/s

R2

= 6D

R = 1 cm: 8300 s (2 h 18 m)

R = 3 m (E. coli): 7.5 x 10-5 s

Page 4: October  30,  2007

Movement of K+ ions through the plasma membrane

Diffusion of K+ ions in water: D = 10-16 m2/s

100 nm x 100 nm

3 x 104 K+ ion /sec

x = 10 nm

C = 500 mM n/t = -D *A/x * c

Page 5: October  30,  2007

O2

CO2

Cells and tissues

Blood flow

Diffusion

Diffusion

Légzés

Convective transport

Convective transport

Page 6: October  30,  2007

Oxygen and CO2 exchange in the lung

R2

= 6D

CO2

OO22

~1 m

Alveolus of the lung

Kapillary vessel

Alveolar epithelium

Kapillary endothelium

oxigen ~500 s

CO2 ~80 s Doxigen = 10-9 m2/s

DCO2 = 6 x 10-9 m2/s

Page 7: October  30,  2007

Diffusion limited rections

A + B AB PkD

k-D

k 1

2kA + B P

Racting molecules Reaction complex

Product

Reaction constants

Ha k-D k 1<<

k 2 kD=

Page 8: October  30,  2007

FRAP (Fluorescence Recovery After Photobleaching)

D

Cell

Nucleus

Page 9: October  30,  2007

Flu

ores

cen

ce in

ten

sity

Time

FRAP recovery curve

Recovery

Bleaching

Page 10: October  30,  2007

Myoblast, expressing a compound that contains GFP (Green Fluorescence Protein)

FRAP

Page 11: October  30,  2007

dndt

dd= - Drot

Rotational diffusion, Florescence anisotropy

Page 12: October  30,  2007

fR

kTDrot

fR = 8r3

8rkT

Drot= 3

= 2DrotMeasurement with

fluorescence anisotropy

Page 13: October  30,  2007

Diffusion potencial

+ +

+++

+++

+

U

Cell membrane

+ +

+++

+++

+

Page 14: October  30,  2007

dU =u+ - u-

u+ + u-RTzF

d(lnc)

Diffusion potential:

„ion mobility”

Integration of this equation provides the

Goldman-Hodgkin-Katz equation

Page 15: October  30,  2007

October 30, 2007October 30, 2007

Lustyik

Biological role of diffusionBiological role of diffusion

Osmosis, chemiosmosisOsmosis, chemiosmosis

The microscopic transport of material

Page 16: October  30,  2007
Page 17: October  30,  2007
Page 18: October  30,  2007

Solvent

Solute

Semipermeable wall or membrane

Osmosis

Page 19: October  30,  2007

AlcoholAlcohol

Este Reggel

Nollet Abbe, 1748

Dutrochet, 1830

Sucrose solution

Water

Page 20: October  30,  2007

Models of osmosis:

Vant’Hoff law

Thermodynamic theory

Page 21: October  30,  2007

vant’Hoff’s law

= RTc

= p

Solution

h

p = h g

Pure water

Jacobus Hendricus van’t Hoff (1852-1911)

Page 22: October  30,  2007

Thermodynamic theory

o1 = o + RT ln xo1

Chemical potential of the solvent:

o1 o2

p1 p2

+ Vpmp1

Vpm: parcial molar volume

Page 23: October  30,  2007

o1 = o + RT ln xo1 + Vpmp1

Equilibrium:

o2 = o + RT ln xo2 + Vpmp2

o1 o2

p1 p2

o1 = o2

Page 24: October  30,  2007

p2 – p1 = RTVpm

lnxo2xo1

o1 = o + RT ln xo1 + Vpmp1

o2 = o + RT ln xo2 + Vpmp2

o1 = o2

Page 25: October  30,  2007

RT

Vpm

lnxo2

xo1

One compartment is pure solvent (xo1=1)The solution is incompressible (Vpm=konstans)

Solvent concentration is low

Vant’Hoff’s law: = RTc

= c (concentration of the solute)

Page 26: October  30,  2007

= RTc

Molality: The number of moles of solute in 1 kg of solvent

Molarity: The number of moles of solute in 1 kg of solution

Page 27: October  30,  2007

0,3 M glicerin:

0,3 M NaCl (Na+, Cl-):

0,3 Osmol

0,6 Osmol

Ozmolarity =

= molarity x number of dissociated ions

Page 28: October  30,  2007

Isotonic solutions:

If their ospmotic pressure is equal

Isotonic solutions with blood and cytoplasm:

0,15 M-os (0,87%) NaCl solution

5,5%-os glucose solution

3,8%-os Na-citrate solution

Page 29: October  30,  2007

Isotonic solution

Hypotonic solution

Hypertonic solution

Human and animal cells

Plant cells

Page 30: October  30,  2007

Thermoosmosis

Cold Warm

Equal concentrations (at start)

Solvent transport fom the warmer to the cooler side

Dilution concentration

Page 31: October  30,  2007

Biological, medical importance and application:

•Lysing red blood cells for clinical laboratory

•Development of oedemas

•Oedema treatment with hypertonic solution

•Mg-szulfát: causing diarrhea

•Hemodialisis of patients suffering from kidney insufficiency

•Dialisis of laboratory specimens

Page 32: October  30,  2007

Isotonic solution = isoosmotic solution

• Colloid osmotic pressure

• Membrane is permeable to the solvent

= RTc„reflection” coefficient 0 < < 1

Page 33: October  30,  2007

Szemipermeable membrane

„Leaky” membrane

Time

Hid

rost

ati c

pre

ssu

re d

iffe

ren

cep

„leaky”: permeable to the solvent

Page 34: October  30,  2007

Volume regulation of living animal cells

Time

Ch

ange

of

cell

vol

um

e

V Shrinking (water uptake)

Volume regulation

Ion transport, release of isotonic solution

Page 35: October  30,  2007

Flow maintained by thermodynamic forces:

Jk = Lk1 X1 + Lk2 X2 + … + Lkn Xn

k = 1, 2, 3, …n

Jv = Lpp p + Lpd Jd = Lpd p + Ldd

Onsager equations:

Jv: „volume” flow Jd: diffussion (osmotic) flow

Page 36: October  30,  2007

JQ

Je Jm

Jv

T

U

c

p

Heat flow Volume flow

Electric current

Mass transport

Elektric potencial difference

Pressure difference

Concentration difference

Temperature difference

Diffusion

Thermoosmosis

Page 37: October  30,  2007

ChemiosmosisChemiosmosis

Page 38: October  30,  2007

Q

CyCNADH

I

II

III

NAD+

OH-

OH-

++

O2

Cytochrom system

ADP

ADP ATP

ATP

ATP Synthase

Chemiosmosis

Page 39: October  30,  2007

Q

CyCNADH

I

II

III

NAD+

OH-

OH-

++

O2

Citokróm rendszer

ADP

ADP ATP

ATP

ATP Synthase

Ca2+ +Cy A

No “Mitochondrial Permeability Transition Pore”

Page 40: October  30,  2007

Membrare potencial in mitochondria

Intact Damaged

Page 41: October  30,  2007

Limited and Facilitated Limited and Facilitated DiffusionDiffusion

Additional cellular transport mechanismsAdditional cellular transport mechanisms

Page 42: October  30,  2007

Passive transport (simple diffusion)

Facilitated diffusion

Cell membrane

Lipid bilayer

Membrane proteins

Page 43: October  30,  2007

www.whfreeman.com

Page 44: October  30,  2007
Page 45: October  30,  2007

Special, diffusion associated cellular mechanisms

The ability of an organism or cell to move towards or against concentration gradient of a specific chemical compound

Inflamatory response: Migration towards the inflamatory center

Bacterial migration for finding regions that it deems favorable

Sporulation of amebas

Chemotaxis:

Page 46: October  30,  2007

Running: flagella turn counterclockwise

„Tumbling”: flagella turn clockwise

Random walking on organelle scale.


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