Channel protein characteristics | Channel proteins have specific shape, so the ion that enters has to be the perfect size |
How is water potential measured | pressure, usually kPa, represented by greek letter psi (the trident) |
how does water pass through cell membrane | aquaporin |
what is Concentration gradient | Difference in concentration |
what is Facilitated diffusion | Passive transport with help of transport proteins (carrier and channel proteins) |
osmosis | net movement of water molecules from a region of high water potential to region of low water potential through a partially permeable membrane |
Water potential of pure water (25C, 100kPa) | 0 psi |
hypotonic solution | Low solute concentration, higher water potential |
Area where diffusion takes place | Surface area |
factors for diffusion | Temperature
Surface area
Concentration gradient
Diffusion distance |
Dynamic equilibrium | All particles are spread out and individual particles are constantly changing |
Active vs passive transport | Active: needs ATP, against concentration gradient, needs carrier or transport protein
Passive: No ATP, down a concentration gradient |
Hypertonic solution | high solute concentraton, lower water postenial |
Isotonic solution | Solution with the same water potential and solute concentration. |
lysis | animal cell bursts due to too much water inside |
protoplast | plant cell without cell wall |
incipient plasmolysis | protoplast begins to move away from cell wall, happens when cell is not turgid. Used to be called flaccid |
plasmolysied | protoplast shrinks away from cell wall |
Define Dialysis Tubing/Visking tube and experiments linked to it | Partially permeable membrane, used to simulate osmosis.
Glucose-starch solution in tube, put into distilled water. It gets bigger because water moves in by osmosis |
Active transport | Needs ATP, against concentration gradient, need carrier/transport protein
ATP changes the shape of carrier protein to allow ions to move in particular directions |
Difference between Facilitated diffusion with carrier protein and Active transport | Active Transport moves against concentration gradient and requires ATP |
What protein is needed for osmosis | Aquaporin |
Endocytosis and types of endocytosis | Bring molecules into cell via infolding of cell surface membrane to form vesicles. Requires ATP
Phagocytosis- solid material
Pinocytosis- liquid material |
Exocytosis | Vesicles move towards cell surface membrane, fuses with cell surface membrane, and release the molecules. Requires ATP |
Carrier protein characteristics | Carrier proteins are have specific binding sites for specific molecule. |