Active transport Flashcards

1
Q

What is active transport?

A
  • transport of a molecule that requires energy because it moves a solute against its concentration gradient (up)
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2
Q

What are four examples of active transport?

A
  • pumps
  • cotransport
  • exocytosis
  • endocytosis
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3
Q

Active transport requires energy in the form of ATP. What is ATP (2)

A
  • adenosine triphosphate is an energy source used by cells

- it is a modified RNA nucleotide

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4
Q

What does ATP do? (2)

A
  • it can transfer the terminal phosphate group to the transport protein which changes the shape of the transport proteins to better move a substance
  • also known as conformational change
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5
Q

What do pumps (such as sodium-potassium pumps in neurons) do?

A

Maintain membrane potential

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6
Q

What is membrane potential?

A

Unequal concentration of ions across the membrane that result in an electrical charge (electrochemical gradient)

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7
Q

What are 3 examples of pumps?

A

Electrogenic, sodium potassium, proton pump

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8
Q

What is an electrogenic pump?

A
  • proteins that generate voltages across membranes, which can be used later as an energy source for cellular processes
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9
Q

Why is the sodium potassium pump important, and what happens?

A
  • animal cells will regulate their relative concentrations of Na+ and K+
  • 3 Na+ pumped out of cell, 2 k+ into cell
  • results in a +1 net charge to the extracellular fluid (outside the neuron)
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10
Q

What is a proton pump? (3)

A
  • integral membrane proteins that builds up a proton gradient (hydrogen ions) across the membrane
  • used by plants, fungi, and bacteria
  • pumps H+ out of cell
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11
Q

What is cotransport and who benefits from it? (2)

A
  • The coupling of a favourable movement of one substance with an unfavourable movement of another substance
  • plants use it for sugars and amino acids
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12
Q

What does cotransport use in order to do what it has to do?

A
  • uses the energy stored in electrochemical gradients (generated by pumps) to move substances against their concentration gradient
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13
Q

What is favourable movement, and what is unfavourable movement?

A
  • favourable movement is downhill diffusion from high to low

- unfavourable movement is uphill transport from low to high

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14
Q

An example of cotransport in plants is the sucrose-H + cotransporter. What happens here?

A
  • sucrose can travel into a plant cell against its concentration gradient only if it is COUPLED with H+ that is diffusing down it’s electrochemical gradient
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15
Q

The transport of large molecules is done through what two types of active transport specifically?

A

Exocytosis and endocytosis

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16
Q

What is exocytosis?

A

The secretion of molecules via vesicles that fuse to the plasma membrane

17
Q

How can vesicles fuse to the plasma membrane in exocytosis? (3)

A
  • vesicles can fuse to the membrane by forming a bilayer
  • once fused, the contents of the vesicle are released to the extracellular fluid
  • an example would be nerve cells releasing neurotransmitters during an action potential
18
Q

What is endocytosis?

A
  • The uptake of molecules from vesicles fused from the plasma membrane (opposite of exocytosis)
19
Q

Three examples of endocytosis?

A

Phagocytosis, pinocytosis, receptor-mediated endocytosis

20
Q

What is phagocytosis?

A

When a cell engulfs particles to be later digested by lysosomes

21
Q

How does phagocytosis work? (3)

A
  • cell surrounds particle with pseudopodia (meaning false foot)
  • packages particles into a food vacuole
  • food vacuole fuses with a lysosome to be digested
22
Q

What is pinocytosis?

A

Nonspecific uptake of extracellular fluid containing dissolved molecules

23
Q

What happens in pinocytosis?

A
  • The cell takes in dissolved molecules in a protein coated vesicle
24
Q

In pinocytosis, cells essentially take in vesicles coated in proteins. Why?

A

The protein coating helps to mediate the transport of molecules

25
Q

What is receptor mediated endocytosis?

A
  • specific uptake of molecules via the solute binding to receptor proteins on the plasma membrane
26
Q

Why is receptor mediated endocytosis important?

A
  • it allows the cell to take up large quantities of a specific substance
27
Q

What happens in receptor mediated endocytosis?

A
  • when the solute binds to the receptors, they cluster in a coated vesicle to be taken into the cell