L2.1 Diffusion & Osmosis Flashcards

1
Q

what does this mean: “the plasma membrane is selectively permeable”

A

it means only some molecules can pass freely across the membrane

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2
Q

what is the passage of molecules across the membrane dependent on?

A

particle size and lipid solubility of the particle (charge)

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3
Q

what molecules can pass across the plasma membrane?

A

permeable: gases (O2 and CO2), water, ethanol
impermeable: ions, glucose and proteins

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4
Q

what are the types of membrane transport? what is the difference? and types of each?

A

passive transport (doesn’t require any energy-ATP): simple diffusion, osmosis, facilitated diffusion (channels and carriers)

active transport (requires energy- ATP): primary active transport, secondary active transport, vesicular transport (endocytosis and exocytosis)

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5
Q

what is diffusion?

A

the movement of molecules from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration

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6
Q

what is concentration gradients?

A

differences in concentration across two area is called a concentration gradient. the greater the difference, the greater the concentration gradient

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7
Q

“the molecules will eventually reach an equilibrium”: what does this mean?

A

evenly distributed. molecules diffuse down the concentration gradient

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8
Q

what is the rate of diffusion controlled by? (5)

A
  1. the size of the concentration gradient (bigger gradient = faster diffusion)
  2. membrane surface area (bigger surface area= faster diffusion)
  3. size of the molecule (small molecules diffuse more quickly than large molecules)
  4. diffusion distance (decreasing diffusion distance = increasing diffusion rate)
  5. lipid solubility of the molecule
    - hydrophobic/lipophilic: enters membrane easily
    - hydrophilic/lipophobic: repelled by membrane- most substances in the body
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9
Q

what is osmosis?

A

the diffusion of WATER across a selectively permeable membrane= the movement of water from an area of high water concentration/low solute concentration to an area of low water concentration/high solute concentration

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10
Q

what is ‘solution’?

A

combination of solute and solvent

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11
Q

what is ‘solvent’?

A

liquid that substances dissolve into

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12
Q

what is ‘solute’?

A

substances that dissolve in liquids

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13
Q

what are ‘penetrating solutes’?

A

can cross the plasma membrane

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14
Q

what are ‘non-penetrating’ solutes?

A

cannot cross the membrane

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15
Q

what happens if the membrane that separates the solutions is permeable to both water and solutes?

A

then both can move until they reach an equilibrium- the amount of water and solutes is balanced across the membrane

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16
Q

what happens if the membrane that separates the solutions is permeable to water but impermeable to solutes?

A

the water will diffuse across the membrane (osmosis), but the solute won’t. the amount of water becomes unbalanced across the membrane

17
Q

what is osmolarity? and what is it measured in?

A

osmolarity= number of solute particles per litre of solution
measured in mOsm/L (milliosmotes/litre)- most body fluids are 300mOsm/L

18
Q

what is tonicity? and what is it dependent on?

A

the ability of a solution to change the shape (tone) of a cell by changing the cells internal water volume (via osmosis). depends on the concentration of non-penetrating solutes on either side of the cell membrane

19
Q

what is the difference between an isotonic, hypertonic and hypotonic solution?

A

isotonic solution- same concentration as ICF
hypertonic solution- higher concentration than ICF
hypotonic solution- lower concentration than ICF

20
Q

In an isotonic solution (ICF- 300mOsm/L; ECF- 300mOsm/L):

  • what is the concentration of non-penetrating solutes in the solution compared to the cell?
  • will there be a net movement of water?
  • what is the effect on cell shape?
A

In an isotonic solution (ICF- 300mOsm/L; ECF- 300mOsm/L):

  • what is the concentration of non-penetrating solutes in the solution compared to the cell? SAME AS THE CELL (300mOsm/L)
  • will there be a net movement of water? NO
  • what is the effect on cell shape? NONE
21
Q

In an hypertonic solution (ICF- 300mOsm/L; ECF- 400mOsm/L):

  • what is the concentration of non-penetrating solutes in the solution compared to the cell?
  • will there be a net movement of water?
  • what is the effect on cell shape?
A

In an hypertonic solution (ICF- 300mOsm/L; ECF- 400mOsm/L):

  • what is the concentration of non-penetrating solutes in the solution compared to the cell? HIGHER
  • will there be a net movement of water? YES (OUT OF THE CELL)
  • what is the effect on cell shape? SHRINK
22
Q

In an hypotonic solution (ICF- 300mOsm/L; ECF- 200mOsm/L):

  • what is the concentration of non-penetrating solutes in the solution compared to the cell?
  • will there be a net movement of water?
  • what is the effect on cell shape?
A

In an hypotonic solution (ICF- 300mOsm/L; ECF- 200mOsm/L):

  • what is the concentration of non-penetrating solutes in the solution compared to the cell? LOWER
  • will there be a net movement of water? YES (INTO THE CELL)
  • what is the effect on cell shape? EXPAND
23
Q

see challenge question in notes

A

see challenge question in notes

24
Q

in determining tonicity, you must take into account the _______ of the solution and whether the plasma membrane is _______ to the molecules

A

in determining tonicity, you must take into account the OSMOLARITY of the solution and whether the plasma membrane is PERMEABLE to the molecules