b) Active transport moves molecules up the concentration gradient, low to high concentration. Diffusion goes down the concentration gradient, high to low concentration.…
Passive transport is moving biochemical and atomic or molecular substances across the cell membrane but unlike active transport it does not involve chemical energy. Active transport is transporting things from a region of lower concentration to higher concentration, and it uses energy. Depending on whether it needs energy and the transports or places that it goes through will depend on whether it will use active or passive.…
Exercise 1: Cell Transport Mechanisms and Permeability: Activity 4: Simulating Filtration Lab Report Pre-lab Quiz Results You scored 100% by answering 4 out of 4 questions correctly. 1. Filtration is a process that You correctly answered: c. is passive. 2. Filtration is dependent upon a You correctly answered: b. hydrostatic pressure gradient. 3. The filtrate You correctly answered: d. All of these answers are correct. 4. An important place that filtration takes place in the body is in You correctly answered: d. the kidneys.…
Cell Transport Mechanisms and Permeability 1 EXERCISE 1 OBJECTIVES 1. To define the following terms: differential permeability, passive and active processes of transport, diffusion (simple diffusion, facilitated dif- fusion, and osmosis), solute pump, pinocytosis, and phagocytosis. 2. To describe the processes that account for the movement of sub- stances across the plasma membrane, and to indicate the driving force for each. 3.…
A. Write a one-paragraph analysis of the results for the procedure. Provide reasons for the difference in the rate of diffusion at the different temperatures.…
Aerobic: energy needed Anaerobic: no energy needed Concentration gradient: unequal distribution of ions across the cell membrane (movement called diffusion) Passive transport: movement from high concentration to low concentration (no energy needed) 1) Diffusion-general (movement of any molecule) -ex. Sugar dissolving into coffee cup 2) Osmosis- specific (movement of only one specific molecule) -ex. Salt sucking water * Isotonic-…
For NaCl, which MWCO membrane(s) provided for the net movement of water without movement of NaCl?…
2. Explain the differences between active and passive transport. Why is each important to the cell?…
Exercise 1: Cell Transport Mechanisms and Permeability: Activity 1: Simulating Dialysis (Simple Diffusion) Lab Report Pre-lab Quiz Results You have not completed the Pre-lab Quiz.…
b. explain the significance of each type of transport to a specific cell (you may use different cell types as examples)…
C. facilitated diffusion, active transport Active transport is where a cell uses energy to move molecules. Facilitated diffusion is the same as diffusion, just when they pass through integral proteins.…
Diffusion is the simplest form of passive transport. Using its own energy molecule will move from areas of higher solute concentrations to areas of lower concentrations until a balance is reached. Osmosis is also a form of passive transport.Osmosis occurs when water molecules diffuse across the cell membrane from an area of higher solute concentration to an area of lower solute concentration.…
4. Describe the result of the attempts to diffuse glucose glucose and albumin through the 200 MWCO membrane. How well did the results compared with your predictions?…
When molecules move from a high to low concentration it is called moving DOWN the concentration gradient. When molecules move from a low to high concentration it is called moving AGAINST the concentration gradient. When the concentration of a solute is the same throughout a system, the system is at EQUILIBRIUM. What kind of transport DOES NOT require energy? PASSIVE…
Passive Transport: Movement of molecules across the cell membrane without energy input from the cell.…