filtration, diffusion, and osmosis
DESCRIPTION
A report on Filtration, Diffusion, and OsmosisTRANSCRIPT
Filtration, Diffusion, and OsmosisJo Patrick MabelinBS Biology 3
Diffusion
•Movement of particles•Concentration of substances differ from
one point to another•High concentration to Low concentration
•Factors affecting diffusion rate through a membrane▫temperature - ↑ temp., ↑ motion of particles▫molecular weight - larger molecules move
slower▫steepness of concentrated gradient -
↑difference, ↑ rate▫membrane surface area - ↑ area, ↑ rate▫membrane permeability - ↑ permeability, ↑
rate
Membrane Permeability
•Diffusion through lipid bilayer•Diffusion through channel proteins
▫Cells control permeability by regulating: Number of channel proteins Opening or closing gates
Osmosis
•Flow of water through selectively permeable membrane
•From: Side of higher water concentration•To: Side of lower water concentration•Movement from lower solute
concentration to higher solute concentration
•Aquaporins: Channel proteins in the plasma membrane specialized for the passage of water
•Cells increase rate of osmosis by installing more aquaporins
Osmotic Pressure
•Amount of hydrostatic pressure to stop osmosis
•Osmosis Slows due to hydrostaitc pressure
Filtration
•Water molecules and extremely small solutes are forced to move through a selectively permeable membrane by a hydrostatic pressure
Tonicity
•ability of a solution to affect fluid volume and pressure in a cell
•depends on concentration and permeability of solute
Hypotonic Solution
•High solvent concentration•Cells absorb water, swell, and may burst
Hypertonic
•High solute concentration•Cells lose water and shrivel
Isotonic
•Concentration of solute and solvent are level
•No changes in cell volume and shape