Module 1 - Part 2
Module 1 - Part 2
BASIS OF LIFE
PART 2 – CELL FUNCTION (HOW DO CELLS COORDINATE
ACTIVITIES WITHIN THEIR INTERNAL ENVIRONMENT AND THE
EXTERNAL ENVIRONMENT?)
Membrane permeability
Types of transport across the membrane
(passive vs active)
LEARNING Molecular mechanisms of transport across
INTENTIONS the membrane
Other types of transport into/out of the cell
– endocytosis and exocytosis
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MEMBRANE PERMEABILITY
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TRANSPORTING
MOLECULES INTO
CELLS
(WATCH
CELL TRANSPORT
)
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DIFFUSION
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FACILITATED DIFFUSION VIA CHANNELS
Channels – Integral membrane proteins,
which allow diffusion across the
membrane down a concentration
gradient.
Channel proteins provide a corridor for
specific molecules or ions to cross the
membrane.
Water can diffuse across the
membrane, but only very slowly
because it is polar.
There are specific channel proteins for
water (results in a faster rate of
diffusion than simple diffusion).
Channel proteins are involved in the
passage of water-soluble polar
particles.
Allows the cell to take up and retain
the molecules it needs and exclude
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what is unwanted.
FACILITATED DIFFUSION VIA CARRIERS
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Osmosis refers to the net diffusion
of water molecules across a
semipermeable membrane. The
direction of movement is from an
area of high water concentration to
CONCEPT:
as the osmotic gradient. The
pressure causing the water to move
along the gradient is known as the
OSMOSIS
osmotic pressure.
Activities:
Model the processes of diffusion and
osmosis (Practical Activity 1.3 in
Skills and Assessment workbook)
‘Diffusion’ Gizmo
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CONCENTRATION GRADIENTS – DIFFERENCES IN ION
CONCENTRATIONS INSIDE AND OUTSIDE OF CELLS
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ACTIVE TRANSPORT
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Large molecules, such as
polysaccharides and proteins,
cross the membrane in bulk via
vesicles.
Exocytosis - materials are
exported out of the cell via
BULK TRANSPORT secretory vesicles. In this
process, the Golgi complex
ACROSS THE packages macromolecules into
transport vesicles that travel to
PLASMA and fuse with the plasma
membrane. This fusion causes
MEMBRANE the vesicle to spill its contents out
of the cell. Exocytosis is
OCCURS BY important in expulsion of waste
materials out of the cell and in
EXOCYTOSIS AND the secretion of cellular products
such as digestive enzymes or
ENDOCYTOSIS hormones.
Endocytosis - materials move
into the cell. There are three
types of endocytosis:06/12/2024
phagocytosis, pinocytosis, and
receptor-mediated
PHAGOCYTOSIS: CELLULAR EATING
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PINOCYTOSIS: CELLULAR DRINKING
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RECEPTOR-MEDIATED ENDOCYTOSIS
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SUMMARY: MEMBRANE TRANSPORT MECHANISMS
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Substances that enter cells must travel from
the outside environment across the surface of
SURFACE
the cell and then diffuse inwards until they
reach the centre of the cell. If a cell has a
large volume, the organelles in the centre of
the cell are further from the outside. If a cell
AREA TO
is flatter or smaller, the organelles in the
centre are close to the outer surface. This
increases the efficiency of substances
diffusing into or out of a cell due to the cell
VOLUME
having a larger surface area to volume
ratio. As a cell increases in size, the surface
area to volume ratio decreases, making
movement of substances across the
RATIO AND
membrane less efficient. Therefore, when a
cell reaches a certain size, it divides into two
smaller cells, restoring a more favourable
surface area to volume ratio.
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A diffusion gradient exists whenever
two areas have different
concentrations of a substance; the
substance moves until the two
concentrations are equal. (Two
solutions of equal concentration are
CONCENTRATION said to be isotonic; a more
concentrated solution is hypertonic
YOUR TURN
INTENTIONS
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CELL REQUIREMENTS
Recall that …
Autotrophs: produce
organic molecules from CO2
and other inorganic
molecules from the
environment.
Heterotrophs: obtain
organic molecules through
other organisms.
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CELL REQUIREMENTS - INORGANIC
Oxygen Is needed for efficient energy supply (respiration) in most organisms. Taken in as a gas by
terrestrial organisms and in solution by aquatic organisms.
Water makes up 70-90% of most organisms. It is an important solvent and transport medium.
Chemical reactions in cells take place in the water-based cytosol, and some of these reactions
include water.
Carbon dioxide is a source of carbon for organic molecules (photosynthesis). Taken in by plants as a
gas, converted into sugars and returns to the atmosphere by the carbon cycle.
Nitrogen is needed to form amino acids (that link together to form proteins), and nucleic acids.
Bacteria take nitrogen gas from the air and convert it into nitrate ions, which are taken up by plants.
Consumers get their nitrogen from these plants. The nitrogen cycle returns nitrogen gas to the air.
Minerals, e.g. calcium, sodium, potassium, iron and magnesium, are important for building
enzymes and vitamins that are needed for structure and function.
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CELL REQUIREMENTS - ORGANIC
Carbohydrates are important energy sources and structural components of organisms.
Examples are glucose, sucrose, starch and cellulose.
Basic subunits are simple sugars called monosaccharides, disaccharides and polysaccharides.
Carbohydrates have hydrogen atoms in a 2:1 ratio with oxygen atoms.
Lipids play an important role in cell membranes.
They include fats and oils which are important for energy storage.
They are composed of a glycerol ‘head’ and fatty acid ‘tail’.
They contain less oxygen compared to carbohydrates and can contain other elements, such as phosphorus and
nitrogen.
Proteins are composed of amino acids linked together by peptide bonds to form a polypeptide chains (two or more of
which are folded into a complex, 3D structure).
Include enzymes, hormones, antibodies, carrier molecules (haemoglobin) and form part of the cell membrane.
Made of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen.
Nucleic acids carry the genetic information of the cell (DNA and RNA)
Long chains of nucleotides (bases, sugars and phosphates).
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WHAT IS METABOLISM?
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CATABOLISM
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ANABOLISM
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ENERGY REQUIREMENTS
In order to survive, organisms must obtain both energy and a carbon source from
the environment.
Phototrophs are organisms that use light energy while chemotrophs obtain energy
from chemicals.
Autotrophs require only carbon dioxide as a carbon source, while heterotrophs
require one or more organic carbon sources (e.g. glucose).
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NUTRITIONAL MODES
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ATP POWERS
CELLULAR WORK
ATP (adenosine
triphosphate) is the
energy shuttle of the
cell.
ATP is composed of
ribose (a sugar), adenine
(a nitrogenous base),
and three phosphate
groups.
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THE HYDROLYSIS OF ATP
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GENERATION OF ATP
Catabolic processes in higher animals and other organisms require oxygen – that is, they
are AEROBIC processes.
Catabolic processes in many protists and bacteria do not require oxygen – that is, they are
ANAEROBIC processes.
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RESPIRATION VS FERMENTATION
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PHOTOSYNTHESIS
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PHOTOSYNTHESIS – LIGHT REACTION
Water is split in the presence of solar energy (light) and
chlorophyll, into hydrogen ions and oxygen. ATP is also
produced.
This occurs in the thylakoids.
Light energy
Water hydrogen ions + oxygen + ATP
Chlorophyll
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PHOTOSYNTHESIS – DARK REACTION (CALVIN CYCLE)
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PHOTOSYNTHESIS SUMMARY
Light energy
Water + Carbon dioxide Glucose + Oxygen
(+ Water)
Chlorophyll
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PRACTICAL ACTIVITY
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Autotrophic and
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Lysosomes – small vesicles that
are filled with digestive enzymes.
The digestive enzymes break
down waste products into smaller
molecules to be reused by the
CELLULAR cell or expelled by exocytosis.
Proteasomes – protein complexes
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Plants do not require specialised excretory
organs, although leaves do excrete
carbon dioxide or oxygen that is excess to
cell requirements.
S
salt in vacuoles and excreting salt crystals
onto the leaf surface to be blown or
washed away.
Terrestrial plants can store wastes in non-
living hardwood or in leaves that are
dropped later.
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Heterotrophic cells break down and
replace carbohydrates, lipids, nucleic
acids and proteins into waste
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WASTE REMOVAL - WATER
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WASTE REMOVAL – NITROGENOUS WASTES
When proteins are broken down, the nitrogenous parts are split off and the remainder of the
molecule is converted into carbohydrates or lipids, to be used as energy. Cells also recycle
nucleic acids, releasing more nitrogenous waste.
The nitrogenous waste must be removed from the cell because it is toxic.
Multicellular animals use their circulatory systems to transport wastes away from cells to the
excretory organs.
In mammals, nitrogenous waste is first managed by the liver (breaks down amino acids to
produce ammonia, which is then converted into urea or uric acid), and then regulated by the
kidneys and excreted as urine.
Specialised structures called nephrons ensure that the blood is continuously filtered to
remove wastes and reabsorb useful substances.
Activity - Complete the nitrogenous waste table
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WASTE
REMOVAL –
NITROGENOU
S WASTES
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WASTE
REMOVAL -
SUMMARY
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YOUR TURN