Cell Transport Mechanisms Flashcards

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1
Q

What is diffusion?

A

The movement of particles down a concentration gradient, they move from a high concentration to a low concentration

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2
Q

What is facilitated diffusion?

A

Diffusion that takes place through carrier proteins or protein channels

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3
Q

What is osmosis?

A

A type of diffusion that involves the movement of water molecules down a concentration gradient through a semi-permeable membrane

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4
Q

What is endocytosis?

A

The movement of large molecules into cells through vesicle formation

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5
Q

What is exocytosis?

A

The movement of large molecules out of cells through vesicle formation

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6
Q

What is active transport?

A

The movement of substances across the membrane of cells using ATP

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7
Q

What is an isotonic solution?

A

Normal cells, the osmotic concentration of the solutes is the same as the cells

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8
Q

What is a hypertonic solution?

A

Shrivelled cells where the water has left, the osmotic concentration of the cells is lower than in the solutes

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9
Q

What is a hypotonic solution?

A

The cells swell and eventually burst, the osmotic concentration in the solutes is lower than in the cells

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10
Q

What does turgid mean?

A

Hard, swollen (hypotonic cells)

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11
Q

What does flaccid mean?

A

Space between vacuole and cell wall (isotonic cells)

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12
Q

What is water potential?

A

A measure of the potential of water to move out of a solution by osmosis

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13
Q

What is turgor?

A

The state of a plant cell when the solute potential causing water to be moved into the cell by osmosis is balanced by the force of the cell wall pressing on the protoplasm

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14
Q

What is plasmolysis?

A

When a plant cell is placed in hypertonic solution when so much water leaves the cell by osmosis that the vacuole

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15
Q

What is the calculation for water potential?

A

Turgor pressure + osmotic potential

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16
Q

What factors affect active transport?

A

-Temperature
-pH levels
-Concentration gradients
-Availability of ATP

17
Q

What is phagocytosis?

A

A form of active transport where a cell engulfs something relatively large e.g a bacterium and encloses it as a vesicle

18
Q

What is pinocytosis?

A

A form of active transport where cells take tiny amounts of extracellular fluid into vesicles

19
Q

What is turgor pressure?

A

The pressure generated as the swelling protoplasm pushes against the cell wall in plants

20
Q

What is a carrier protein?

A

Proteins which move a substance through the membrane in active transport

21
Q

What is pressure potential?

A

A measure of the inward pressure exerted by the plant cell wall on the protoplasm of a cell opposing the entry of water by osmosis

22
Q

What is passive transport?

A

Transport that takes place as a result of concentration, pressure or electrochemical gradients and involves no energy from a cell

23
Q

What are the differences between passive transport and active transport?

A

-Passive transport diffuses from high to low
-Passive transport includes osmosis
-Passive transport requires no energy
-Active transport includes engulfing a transport protein
-Active transport diffuses low to high
-Active transport requires energy

24
Q

What is the definition of osmosis about water potential?

A

The net movement of water molecules from an area of higher water potential to an area of lower water potential through a partially permeable membrane