Cells - Transport across Cell Membranes Flashcards

1
Q

Why are there proteins embedded in the plasma membrane?

A

The proteins allow some substances to pass through which can’t be easily transported through the phospholipid bilayer. Non-polar molecules can easily pass through.

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2
Q

What is the protein channel?

A

A protein completely spanning the phospholipid bilayer which form water-filled tubes to allow water-soluble ions to diffuse across the membrane.

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3
Q

What is a carrier protein?

A

A protein completely spanning the phospholipid bilayer which bind to ions or molecules then change shape in order to move these molecules across the membrane.

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4
Q

Phospholipids form a bilayer. They are important components of cell-surface membranes. What is their structure?

A
  • The hydrophilic heads of both phospholipid layers point to the outside of the cell-surface membrane attracted by water on both sides.
  • The hydrophobic tails of both phospholipid layers point into the centre of the cell membrane, repelled by the water on both sides.
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5
Q

What are the functions of phospholipids in the membranes?

A
  • Allow lipid-soluble (non-polar) substances to enter and leave the cell.
  • Prevent water-soluble (polar) substances entering and leaving the cell.
  • Make the membrane flexible and self-sealing.
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6
Q

Proteins are interspersed throughout the cell surface membrane. What are the two main ways they are embedded in the phospholipid bilayer?

A

Extrinsic proteins: Some proteins occur in the surface of the bilayer and never extend completely across it. They act either to give mechanical support to the membrane or, in conjunction with glycolipids, as cell receptors for molecules such as hormones or as enzymes. May have carbohydrates bound to them.

Intrinsic proteins: Other proteins completely span the phospholipid bilayer from one side to the other. Some are protein channels, which form water-filled tubes to allow water-soluble ions to diffuse across the membrane. Others are carrier proteins that bind to ions or molecules like glucose and amino acids, then change shape in order to move these molecules across the membrane. They are made of protein only.

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7
Q

What are the functions of the proteins in the membrane?

A
  • provide structural support
  • act as channels transporting water-soluble substances across the membrane
  • allow active transport across the membrane through carrier proteins
  • form cell-surface receptors for identifying cells
  • helps cells adhere together
  • acts as receptors, for example for hormones
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8
Q

What is cholesterol?

A
  • Cholesterol molecules occur within the phospholipid bilayer of the cell-surface membrane.
  • They add strength and some rigidity to the membranes, particularly at high temperatures.
  • Cholesterol molecules are very hydrophobic and therefore play an important role in preventing loss of water and dissolved ions from the cell.
  • They also pull together the fatty acid tails of the phospholipid molecules, limiting their movement and that of other molecules but without making the membrane as a whole too rigid.
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9
Q

What are the functions of cholesterol in the membrane?

A
  • reduce lateral movement of the other molecules including phospholipids
  • make the membrane less fluid at high temperatures
  • prevent leakage of water and dissolved ions from the cell
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10
Q

What is a glycolipid?

A

Glycolipids are made up of a carbohydrate covalently bonded with a lipid. The carbohydrate portion extends from the phospholipid bilayer into the watery environment outside the cell where it acts as a cell-surface receptor for specific chemicals, e.g. the human ABO blood system operates as a result of glycolipids on the cell-surface membrane.

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11
Q

What are the functions of glycolipids in the membrane?

A
  • act as recognition sites
  • help maintain the stability of the membrane
  • help cells to attach to one another and so form tissues (acts as binding sites)
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12
Q

What are glycoproteins?

A

Carbohydrate chains are attached to many extrinsic proteins on the outer surface of the cell membrane. These glycoproteins also act as cell-surface receptors, more specifically for hormones and neurotransmitters.

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13
Q

What are the functions of glycoproteins in the membrane?

A
  • act as recognition sites
  • helps cells to attach to one another and so form tissues
  • allows cells to recognise one another, e.g. lymphocytes can recognise an organism’s own cells.
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14
Q

Why do most molecules not freely diffuse across the cell-surface membrane?

A

Because many are:

  • not soluble in lipids and therefore cannot pass through the phospholipid layer
  • too large to pass through the channels in the membrane
  • of the same charge as the charge on the protein channels and so, even if they are small enough to pass through, they are repelled
  • electrically charged (polar) and therefore have difficulty passing through the non-polar hydrophobic tails in the phospholipid bilayer
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15
Q

What are the functions of membranes within cells?

A
  • Control the entry and exit of materials in discrete organelles such as mitochondria and chloroplasts.
  • Separate organelles from cytoplasm so that specific metabolic reactions can take place within them.
  • Provide an internal transport system, e.g. endoplasmic reticulum.
  • Isolate enzymes that might damage the cell, e.g. lysosomes.
  • Provide surfaces on which reactions can occur, e.g. protein synthesis using ribosomes on rough endoplasmic reticulum.
  • Has binding sites.
  • Confers antigenic properties to the cell.
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16
Q

What is the fluid-mosaic model?

A

Fluid because the individual phospholipid molecules can move relative to one another. This gives the membrane a flexible structure that is constantly changing in shape.

Mosaic because the proteins that are embedded in the phospholipid bilayer vary in shape, size and pattern in the same way as the stones or tiles of a mosaic.

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17
Q

Cells have many membranes. What are they?

A
  • nuclear envelope (double membrane)
  • outer chloroplast membrane
  • thylakoid membrane
  • tonoplast (vacuole membrane)
  • lysosome membrane
  • outer mitochondrial membrane
  • inner mitochondrial membrane (cristae)
  • rough and smooth endoplasmic reticulum membrane
  • golgi apparatus membrane
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18
Q

What is diffusion?

A

The movement of a substance from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration, along the usual concentration gradient until evenly distributed. It is caused by the random movement of particles due to kinetic energy. It does not require any energy other than heat and so is a passive process.

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19
Q

What are the factors affecting the rate of movement across cell membranes?

A
  • surface area
  • number of channel or carrier proteins
  • differences in gradients of concentration or water potential
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20
Q

What is facilitated diffusion?

A

Facilitated diffusion is a passive process. It relies only on the inbuilt motion (kinetic energy) of the diffusing molecules. There is no external input of ATP from respiration. Like diffusion, it occurs down a concentration gradient, but it differs in that it occurs at specific points on the plasma membrane where there are special protein molecules. The proteins pass substances across the membrane faster than otherwise possible, however it can be limited by the number of proteins. The two types of proteins that are involved are protein channels and carrier proteins. Each has a different mechanism.

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21
Q

Which proteins are responsible for facilitated diffusion?

A
  • carrier proteins

- channel proteins

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22
Q

How are carrier proteins responsible for facilitated diffusion?

A

Carrier proteins span the plasma membrane. When a molecule such as glucose that is specific to the protein is present, it binds with the protein. This causes it to change shape in such a way that the molecule is released to the inside of the membrane. No external energy is needed for this. The molecules move from a region where they are highly concentrated to one of lower concentration, using only the kinetic energy of the molecules themselves. This is often done by co-transport.

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23
Q

How are channel proteins responsible for facilitated diffusion?

A

Protein channels are proteins that form water-filled hydrophilic channels across the membrane. They allow specific water-soluble ions to pass through. The channels are selective, each opening in the presence of a specific ion. If the particular ion is not present, the channel remains closed. In this way, there is control over the entry and exit of ions. The ions bind with the protein causing it to change shape in a way that closes it to one side of the membrane and opens it to the other side.

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24
Q

What is active transport?

A

Active transport is the process by which a cell takes up a substance against a concentration gradient (e.g. from a lower concentration to a higher concentration).

It uses protein carrier molecules that are highly specific but also requires energy. This comes in the form of a molecule called ATP which is produced during respiration. Cells in which lots of active transport takes place, such as the epithelial cells of the small intestine, have many mitochondria which produce ATP by hydrolysis for this process.

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25
Q

Give an example of where active transport is used.

A

The sodium/potassium pump found in all animal cell membranes. Continually uses ATP to actively pump sodium out of the cell and potassium into the cell. This creates concentration gradients across the membrane.

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26
Q

What is co-transport?

A

Carrier proteins can sometimes transport two particles at once. Both must be present for transport to take place. Often both an active and passive process as one particle is moved with the concentration gradient and the other is moved against it. Substances can be moved in the same (symport) or opposite (antiport) direction.

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27
Q

What uses diffusion directly across phospholipid bilayers?

A

small, lipid-soluble, uncharged molecules

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28
Q

What uses facilitated diffusion using channel proteins?

A

small, polar molecules and ions

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29
Q

What uses facilitated diffusion using carrier proteins?

A

larger, lipid-insoluble molecules

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30
Q

Describe the solute concentration outside of the cell, the water potential outside of the cell, and the net movement of water of a hypotonic solution.

A

solute concentration outside of cell - lower
water potential outside of cell - higher
net movement of water - in to cell

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31
Q

Describe the solute concentration outside of the cell, the water potential outside of the cell, and the net movement of water of a isotonic solution.

A

solute concentration outside of cell - same
water potential outside of cell - same
net movement of water - no net movement

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32
Q

Describe the solute concentration outside of the cell, the water potential outside of the cell, and the net movement of water of a hypertonic solution.

A

solute concentration outside of cell - higher
water potential outside of cell - lower
net movement of water - out of cell

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33
Q

What is osmosis?

A

Osmosis is defined as the passage of water from a region where it has a higher water potential to a region where it has a lower water potential through a selectively permeable membrane. It is a special case of diffusion in that the concentrations of solutes in the water can affect how it occurs.

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34
Q

What is a solute? What is a solvent?

A

Since water is a polar molecule, many substances dissolve in it. These dissolved substances are termed solutes, and water is a solvent.

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35
Q

What is water potential?

A

Water potential measures the concentration of free water molecules. It is a measure of the tendency of these molecules to diffuse to another area. The more free water molecules, the higher the water potential. Water potential is the pressure created by water molecules.

36
Q

What is water potential measured in?

A

Osmosis can be quantified using water potential. Water always moves from a high water potential to a low water potential. Water potential is measured in units of pressure kiloPascals (kPa), where the highest water potential (that of pure water) is 0 kPa and lower
water potentials go into negative numbers. The more concentrated the solution, the lower the number.

37
Q

Describe osmosis in plant cells.

A

Under isotonic conditions, there is no net movement of water. In a hypotonic environment, vacuoles fill with water, turgor pressure develops, and chloroplasts are seen next to the cell wall. In a hypertonic environment, vacuoles lose water, the cytoplasm shrinks (plasmolysis), and chloroplasts are seen in the centre of the cell.

38
Q

Describe osmosis in animal cells.

A

Under isotonic conditions, there is no net movement of water. In a hypotonic environment, water enters the cell, which may burst (lysis). In a hypertonic environment, water leaves the cell, which shrivels (crenation).

39
Q

Why are all particles constantly in motion?

A

All particles are constantly in motion due to the kinetic energy that they possess. This motion is random, with no set pattern to the way the particles move around. Particles are constantly bouncing off one another as well as off other objects.

40
Q

Can diffusion occur between different concentrations of different compounds?

A

Diffusion ONLY occurs between different concentrations of the same substance.

41
Q

Why don’t charged ions and polar molecules diffuse easily?

A

Because of the hydrophobic nature of the fatty-acid tails of the phospholipids in the membrane. The movement of these molecules is made easier by transmembrane channels and carriers that span the membrane. This process is therefore called facilitated diffusion.

42
Q

What is diffusion proportional to?

A

Diffusion is proportional to the difference in concentration between two regions (the concentration gradient).

43
Q

How can you find the water potential of cells or tissues?

A

One way of finding the water potential of cells or tissues is to place them in a series of solutions of different water potentials. Where there is no net gain or loss of water from the cells or tissues, the water potential inside the cells or tissues must be the same as that of the external solution.

44
Q

When is a dynamic equilibrium established in osmosis?

A

At the point where the water potentials on either side of the plasma membrane are equal, a dynamic equilibrium is established and there is no net movement of water.

45
Q

Explain osmosis in animal red blood cells.

A

Animal cells, such as red blood cells, contain a variety of solutes dissolved in their watery cytoplasm. If a red blood cell is placed in pure water, it will absorb water by osmosis because it has a lower water potential. Cell surface membranes are very thin and, although they are flexible, they cannot stretch to any great extent. The cell-surface membrane will therefore break, bursting the cell and releasing its contents (in red blood cells this is called haemolysis). To prevent this happening, animal cells normally live in a liquid which has the same water potential as the cells. In this example, the liquid is the blood plasma. This an red blood cells have the same water potential. If a red blood cell is placed in a solution with a water potential lower than its own, water leaves by osmosis and the cell shrinks and becomes shrivelled.

46
Q

What is the central vacuole?

A

Contains a solution of salts, sugars and organic acids in water.

47
Q

What is the cellulose cell wall?

A

A tough, inelastic covering that is permeable to even large molecules.

48
Q

What is ATP used for in active transport?

A
  • To directly move molecules.
  • To individually move molecules using a concentration gradient which has already been set up by (direct) active transport. This is known as co-transport.
49
Q

How does active transport differ from passive forms of transport?

A
  • Metabolic energy in the form of ATP is needed.
  • Substances are moved against a concentration gradient, that is from a lower to a higher concentration.
  • Carrier protein molecules which act as ‘pumps’ are involved.
  • The process is very selective, with specific substances being transported.
50
Q

Describe the direct active transport of a single molecule or ion.

A
  • The carrier proteins span the plasma membrane and bind to the molecule or ion to be transported on one side of it.
  • The molecule or ion binds to receptor sites on the carrier protein.
  • On the inside of the cell/organelle, ATP binds to the protein, causing it to split into ADP and a phosphate molecule. As a result, the protein molecule changes shape and opens to the opposite side of the membrane.
  • The molecule or ion is then released to the other side of the membrane.
  • The phosphate molecule is released from the protein which causes the protein to revert to its original shape, ready for the process to be repeated. The phosphate molecule then recombines with the ADP to form ATP during respiration.
51
Q

What is the difference between active transport and facilitated diffusion?

A

Both use carrier proteins but facilitated diffusion occurs down a concentration gradient, while active transport occurs against a concentration gradient. This means that facilitated diffusion does not require metabolic energy, while active transport does. The metabolic energy is provided in the form of ATP.

52
Q

What are different carrier proteins involved in?

A

Different carrier proteins are involved in facilitated diffusion and active transport but any given protein carrier is very specific about what it carries and by which method.

53
Q

What is the sodium-potassium pump?

A

Sometimes more than one molecule or ion may be moved in the same direction at the same time by active transport. Occasionally, the molecule or ion is moved into a cell/organelle at the same time as a different one is being removed from it. One example of this is the sodium-potassium pump.

In the sodium-potassium pump, sodium ions are actively removed from the cell/organelle while potassium ions are actively taken in from the surroundings. This process is essential to a number of important processes in the organism, including the creation of a nerve impulse.

54
Q

What is exocytosis and endocytosis?

A

Exocytosis and endocytosis transport large particles.

In endocytosis, the cell membrane binds to a large molecule resulting in the formation of a vesicle. The vesicle containing the large molecules then enters into the cell.

In exocytosis, vesicles containing molecules of substances are fused with the inside of the cell surface membrane and the molecules are secreted from the cell.

55
Q

Where does co-transport occur?

A

Co-transport uses ions to move substances into and out of cells. This occurs particularly in epithelial cells of the ileum. Here sodium and potassium ions are pumped out of the epithelial cell by active transport into the blood leaving a lower concentration in the cell. This causes these ions to move in from the lumen by facilitated diffusion, which at the same time brings glucose and amino acids into the cell. These then diffuse from a high concentration in the epithelial cell to a low concentration in the blood.

56
Q

What is the effect of dissolved solutes on water potential?

A

The presence of solutes (e.g. sucrose) lowers water potential because the solutes restrict the movement of water molecules.

57
Q

What has the highest water potential?

A

pure water

58
Q

Which direction does water diffuse in regarding water potentials?

A

Water always diffuses from regions of less negative to more negative water potential.

59
Q

What is water potential determined by?

A
  • the solute potential
  • the pressure potential

water potential = solute potential + pressure potential

60
Q

What is the pressure potential?

A

The pressure potential is the hydrostatic pressure to which water is subjected (e.g. by a plant cell wall). In other words, it is a measure of the pressure that develops inside a cell as a consequence of the inflow of water. The pressure potential is usually positive and is zero when cells are in equilibrium. It is sometimes called turgor or wall pressure.

61
Q

What is the solute potential?

A

The solute potential is a measure of the reduction in water potential due to the presence of solute molecules. In other words, a measure of the extent to which solute concentrations lower the water potential. It is the negative component of water potential, sometimes referred to as the osmotic potential or osmotic pressure.

62
Q

What happens with a hypotonic solution?

A
  • less negative solute potential
  • less negative water potential
  • loses water by osmosis
63
Q

What happens with a hypertonic solution?

A
  • more negative solute potential
  • more negative water potential
  • gains water by osmosis
64
Q

What is turgor?

A

When the contents of a plant cell push against the cell wall, they create turgor (tightness) which provides support for the plant body. When cells lose water, there is a loss of turgor and the plant wilts. Complete loss of turgor from a cell is called plasmolysis and is irreversible.

65
Q

What happens when the external water potential is the same as that of the cell?

A

When the external water potential is the same as that of the cell, there is no net movement of water.

66
Q

What happens when the external water potential is more negative than the water potential of the cell?

A

When the external water potential is more negative than the water potential of the cell, water leaves the cell and, because the cell wall is rigid, the plasma membrane shrinks away from the cell wall. This process is termed plasmolysis and the cell becomes flaccid (pressure potential = 0). Full plasmolysis is irreversible; the cell cannot recover by taking up water.

67
Q

What happens when the external water potential is less negative than the water potential of the cell?

A

When the external water potential is less negative than the water potential of the cell, water enters the cell. A pressure potential is generated when sufficient water has been taken up to cause the cell contents to press against the cell wall. The pressure potential rises progressively until it offsets the solute potential. Water uptake stops when the water potential of the cell = 0. The rigid cell wall prevents cell rupture. Cells in this state are turgid.

68
Q

How can you increase the rate of movement across membranes, regarding epithelial cells?

A

The epithelial cells lining the ileum possess microvilli. These are finger-like projections of the cell-surface membrane. The microvilli provide more surface area for the insertion of carrier proteins through which diffusion, facilitated diffusion and active transport can take place. Another mechanism to increase transport across membranes is to increase the number of protein channels and carrier proteins in any given area of membrane (i.e. increase their density).

69
Q

What is the role of diffusion in absorption?

A

As carbohydrates and proteins are being digested continuously, there is normally a greater concentration of glucose and amino acids within the ileum than in the blood. There is therefore a concentration gradient down which glucose moves by facilitated diffusion from inside the ileum into the blood. Given that the blood is constantly being circulated by the heart, the glucose absorbed into it is continuously being removed by the cells as they use it up during respiration. This helps us to maintain the concentration gradient between the inside of the ileum and the blood. This means the rate of movement by facilitated diffusion across epithelial cell-surface membranes is increased.

70
Q

What is the role of active transport in absorption?

A

At best, diffusion only results in the concentrations either side of the intestinal epithelium becoming equal. This means that not all the available glucose and amino acids can be absorbed in this way and some may pass out of the body. The reason why this does not happen is because glucose and amino acids are also being absorbed by active transport. This means that all the glucose and amino acids should be absorbed into the blood.

71
Q

Give an example of co-transport.

A

The mechanism by which glucose and amino acids are absorbed into the blood from the small intestine.

72
Q

Describe the sodium-potassium pump system.

A
  1. Sodium ions are actively transported out of the epithelial cells, by the sodium-potassium pump, into the blood. This takes place in one type of of protein-carrier molecule found in the cell-surface membrane of the epithelial cells.
  2. This maintains a much higher concentration of sodium ions in the lumen of the intestine than inside the epithelial cells.
  3. Sodium ions diffuse into the epithelial cells down this concentration gradient through a different type of protein carrier (co-transport protein) in the cell-surface membrane. As the sodium ions diffuse in through this second carrier protein, they carry either amino acid molecules or glucose molecules into the cell with them.
  4. The glucose/amino acids pass into the blood plasma by facilitated diffusion using another type of carrier.
73
Q

Why is the movement of glucose/amino acids into the epithelial cells not considered as active transport?

A

Both sodium ions and glucose/amino acid molecules move into the cell, but while the sodium ions move down their concentration gradient, the glucose molecules move against their concentration gradient. It is the sodium ion concentration gradient, rather than ATP directly, that powers the movement of glucose and amino acids into the cells. This makes it an indirect rather than a direct form of active transport.

74
Q

What is flaccid?

A

Plant cells or tissue that is drooping as a result of a lack of water.

75
Q

What is lysis?

A

The disintegration of a cell by rupture of the cell wall or membrane.

76
Q

What is plasmolysis?

A

Contraction of the cell membrane of a plant cell, resulting in it pulling away from the cell wall, as a result of a loss of water.

77
Q

What is turgid?

A

A plant cell that contains the maximum volume of water it can. Additional entry of water is prevented by the cell wall stopping further expansion of the cell.

78
Q

What is turgor pressure?

A

Pressure exerted by a plant cell membrane against the plant cell wall as a result of the cell taking up water.

79
Q

What is water potential?

A

The pressure created by water molecules. It is the measure of the extent to which a solution gives out water. The greater the number of water molecules present, the higher (less negative) the water potential. Pure water has a water potential of zero.

80
Q

What phosphorylates sodium ions?

A

ATP (leads to a conformational change)

81
Q

What’s a conformational change?

A

A change in the shape of a macromolecule, often induced by environmental factors.

82
Q

What are aquaporins?

A

Channel proteins that allow water to pass through the membrane.

83
Q

How is ATP used in active transport?

A

Active transport requires the hydrolysis of ATP into ADP plus an inorganic phosphate.

84
Q

What are examples of endocytosis?

A

Phagocytosis is endocytosis which allows for the uptake of solids.

Pinocytosis is endocytosis which allows for the uptake of fluids.

85
Q

Where does absorption of products of digestion occur?

A
  • Absorption of products of digestion begins in the duodenum.
  • Majority of the absorption occurs in the ileum.
  • Specifically, the absorption occurs at the microvilli surface of the epithelial cells which make up the villi.
86
Q

How are cells adapted for rapid transport? (factors affecting rate of transport)

A
  1. Surface Area
    The villi increase surface area in the ileum and hence increase rate of glucose and sodium transport.
  2. Number of Channel Proteins
    The more channel proteins present, the faster facilitated diffusion is.
  3. Number of Carrier Proteins
    The more carrier proteins present, the faster the facilitated diffusion or active transport.
  4. Number of Aquaporins
    The more aquaporins present, the faster the osmosis.
87
Q

What are the limitations of simple diffusion imposed by the nature of the phospholipid bilayer?

A

If the particles can move through the lipid bilayer by simple diffusion, then there is no limit to the number that can fit through the membrane. The rate of diffusion increases linearly as we add more particles to one side of the membrane.