Movement of Substances
Here are the links to see an animation of each movement process discussed in class.
Things to know before we begin
- Substances move throughout, in and out of cells by passive and active media.
- A concentration gradient is required to direct the movement
- Substances moved are varied and they include small, large, charged and neutral particles
Now for the details:
- A concentration gradient exists when molecules are not evenly distributed. that means you will have a region having more molecules than another. This difference in the amount of molecules is the concentration gradient.
- Movement along a concentration gradient - from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration.
- Movement against a concentration gradient - from an area of low concentration to an area of high concentration.
- Passive processes do not require energy. These include:
- Diffusion -
- Osmosis
- Active processes require ATP energy.
- active transport
- Diffusion - movement of uncharged molecules along a concentration gradient, until evenly distributed. eg. perfume in air, red dye in water, oxygen in cells. CLICK HERE to see diffusion
- Osmosis - movement of water molecules through a selectively permeable membrane, along a concentration gradient, until evenly distributed. CLICK HERE to see osmosis
- Active Transport - movement of charged particles (ions) against a concentration gradient through carrier proteins (gates) with the help of energy. CLICK HERE to see active transport
- Endocytosis - the intake of substances into a cell by the folding of the membrane (invagination) into a vacuole. > phagocytosis - intake of solid material into a cell >pinocytosis - intake of liquid material into the cell
- Exocytosis - the release of the contents of a cell vacuole to the outside of the cell by fusion of the vacuole with the cell membrane. CLICK HERE to see endocytosis & exocytosis