Creado por Morgan Morgan
hace casi 11 años
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Pregunta | Respuesta |
3 major routes by which substances can cross membranes? | Diffusion through aqueous pores. Dissolving in the lipid portion of the membrane. Carrier mediated or facilitated diffusion. |
What can pass through pores and channels in the lipid layer? | Water and other polar molecules |
Polar molecules are those with an.........charge distribution. They have positive and negative ends. | uneven |
Pore size is about ......in diameter? | 10 Angstroms. Therefore any molecule bigger than this cannot pass through the membrane by this route. |
What substances diffuse through the lipid membrane? | Gases (oxygen, carbon dioxide) Steroid hormones Fatty acids Glycerol and other alcohols |
With simple diffusion and dissolving in the lipid membrane the rate of movement is in ........proportion to the concentration gradient across the membrane. | direct. |
However, with carrier mediated (facilitated) diffusion there is ........increase in rate of movement at a higher concentration gradient. | NO. i.e. the rate of movement reaches a plateau. |
There are ......molecules which become saturated at higher concentrations. | CARRIER |
What process maintains the concentration difference across the membrane? | ACTIVE TRANSPORT |
The active transport systems are known as... | Membrane pumps - they pump a substance from one side of the membrane to the other. |
What does the active transport system need in order to work? | ATP (ENERGY) |
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