Cellular Transport and the Cell Cycle
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Transcript Cellular Transport and the Cell Cycle
Cellular Transport and the
Cell Cycle
Unit 3
Chapter 8
Different ways of transporting
materials across a cell membrane
1. Passive transport
1.
2.
3.
Diffusion
Osmosis: water diffusion
Facilitated transport
2. Active transport
3. Exocytosis
4. Endocytosis
Cells in isotonic solutions
Cell loses and gains
water at an equal rate.
Net change to cell =
nothing
Isotonic solution
Not ideal for plant cells
because the cells
become flaccid (limp)
Ideal for animal cells or
cells without cell walls
Cells in a hypotonic solution
More water moves into
the cell than moves out.
Net change = cell mass
increases
Hypotonic solution
Ideal for plant cell
where the cell becomes
turgid (swollen)
Not ideal for animal
cells where the cell
lyses (bursts)
Cells in a hypertonic solution
More water moves out
of the cell than moves
in
Net change = cell mass
decreases
Hypertonic solution
Not ideal for any cell
Both shrink.
Passive transport
Movement of materials
across a cell membrane
in the direction of
higher concentration
to lower concentration
No ATP energy
required
Passive transport by proteins
Facilitated transport
Movement of chemicals
down a chemical
gradient (from high to
low concentration)
through a protein
Passive transport
Channel vs. carrier proteins
Click
on
image
to
view
video.
Active transport
Requires energy to move substances across the
membrane against the concentration gradient
(from lower to higher concentration)
Click on image
to view video.
Exocytosis: transport of large particles
out of cell
Endocytosis: transport of large
particles inside of a cell
Cell reproduction: making new cells
by a process called cell division
Cell cycle: sequence of
growth and division of a
cell
Step 1: Interphase (G1,
S, G2)
Step 2: Mitosis and
Cytokinesis (M)
Eukaryotic chromosome structure
Double helix coiled and
twisted into a
condensed structure
Bacterial DNA differs in
that it is circular and not
linear.
Step 1: Interphase
Grows in size
Copies DNA
No visible DNA
G1, S, G2 phases
Each chromosome makes a copy, and the two
resulting chromosomes are joined at the
centromere.
Step 2: Mitosis (nuclear division)
Prophase
Metaphase
Anaphase
Telophase
Prophase: spindle fibers extend,
nuclear membrane disintegrates,
chromosomes coil up and pair up
Metaphase: Meta means “middle”,
chromosomes aligned along the middle
Anaphase: chromosomes pulled apart
when spindle fibers become shorter
Telophase: two nucleus form at each
pole of the cell
Cytokinesis: forming two daughter
cells identical to the parent cell
Animal cells:
cell pinches
down the
middle
Plant cells:
cell plate
forms to make
new cell wall
Onion root tip showing phases of
mitosis
The cell cycle
Click on image to view video.