Transcript
Page 1: FACILITATED DIFFUSION

FACILITATED DIFFUSION

• A type of passive transport that does not require energy to move molecules down their concentration gradient

• uses membrane proteins to move molecules across the membrane that are large or charged (ions)

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How does active transport differ from diffusion?

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Active Transport• Moves molecules from low

concentration to high concentration• Requires energy in the form of

ATP• Used to generate impulses

through nerve cells & to allow cells to continue to store nutrients

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Bulk Transport-Endocytosis

• Cells ingesting (taking in) large particles, fluid, etc.• Membrane folds inward, makes a pouch, encloses material, and

membrane pinches off• Material is enclosed in a vesicle• Transported to lysosome for digestion, or to other organelles for

use (ex. WBC take in & destroy bacteria)

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Types of Endocytosis

• Pinocytosis: solutes or fluids (cellular drinking)• Phagocytosis: large particles, cells (cellular eating)

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Bulk Transport-Exocytosis

• Reverse of Endocytosis• Vesicles fuse w/membrane, releasing

contents• Ex: releasing proteins like insulin (

animation)

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IMPORTANT!!!• Active transport & ALL forms of

Bulk transport require energy!

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Can you???Distinguish between passive and active

transportExplain why facilitated diffusion is a

type of passive transportDescribe the difference between a

hypertonic, hypotonic and isotonic environment

Compare/Contrast endocytosis and exocytosis

Describe the structure of the cell membrane & a phospholipid


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