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Page 1: Passive and Active Transport

Passive and Active Transport

Movement of material into and out of cells

Page 2: Passive and Active Transport

Passive transport is the movement of substances across the cell membrane without the use of energy by the cell

Page 3: Passive and Active Transport

Diffusion is the movement of a substance from an area of high concentration to an area of lower concentration

Page 4: Passive and Active Transport

Osmosis is the diffusion of free water molecules across a selectively permeable membrane.

Page 5: Passive and Active Transport

Ion ChannelsIon channels are proteins that have a pore through which ions can cross the cell membrane.

Ions cannot diffuse across the cell membrane due to the lipid bi-layer.

Ion channels move ions from an area of high ion concentration to an area of low ion concentration (down the ion’s concentration gradient).

Page 6: Passive and Active Transport

Facilitated DiffusionIn facilitated diffusion, a carrier protein transports a substance across the cell membrane down the concentration gradient of the substance

Page 7: Passive and Active Transport

Active Transport

Active transport is the movement of a substance against the concentration gradient of the substance. Active transport requires cells to use energy

Page 8: Passive and Active Transport

Sodium-Potassium Pump

In animal cells, the sodium-potassium pump uses energy supplied by ATP to transport sodium ions out of the cell and potassium ions into the cell

Page 9: Passive and Active Transport

Endocytosis

Click for video of Endocytosis and Exocytosis

During endocytosis, substances are moved into a cell by a vesicle that pinches off from the cell membrane

Page 10: Passive and Active Transport

Exocytosis

During exocytosis substances inside a vesicle are released from a cell as the vesicle fuses with the cell membrane

Page 11: Passive and Active Transport

Communications between Cells

Communication between cells often involves signal molecules that are bound by receptor proteins


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