Diffusion Quiz
Exocytosis
Process by which a cell releases large amounts of material
Are endocytosis and exocytosis forms of passive or active transport?
active
Is facilitated diffusion passive or active transport?
passive
Is simple diffusion passive or active transport?
passive
During exocytosis, which organelles fuse with the cell membrane?
vesicles
Hypertonic
when comparing two solutions, the solution with the greater concentration of solutes
Hypotonic
when comparing two solutions, the solution with the lesser concentration of solutes
isotonic
when the concentration of two solutions is the same
Phagocytosis
A type of endocytosis in which a cell engulfs large particles or whole cells
pinocytosis
A type of endocytosis in which the cell ingests extracellular fluid and its dissolved solutes.
Circle the statements below that would be TRUE about simple diffusion. HINT: There is more than one!
A) It is a form of passive transport. B) Molecules travel with the concentration gradient. c) D) It is how oxygen and carbon dioxide travel across the membrane.
which molecule powers active transport?
ATP
how are active and passive transport different
Active and Passive transport are different by how active transport requires an input of energy while passive transport does not require an input of energy. Active transport requires the input of the molecule ATP and passive transport does not have any input of energy. Active transport goes from low concentration to high concentration while passive transport goes from high concentration to low concentration.
Osmosis
Diffusion of water through a selectively permeable membrane
How are -endo and -exocytosis similar and different?
Endocytosis and exocytosis are different by how endocytosis brings materials to the inside of the cell while exocytosis brings materials out of the cell Exocytosis has the vesicle being formed in the Golgi apparatus which then fuses with the membrane, while endo has the vesicle. (both need energy)
Sometimes, a substance can only travel across a cell membrane via facilitated diffusion. What is facilitated diffusion?
Facilitated diffusion is when molecules still have net movement of high concentration to low concentration, but they may be too large or have other characteristics that prevent them from traveling directly across the selective cell membrane. They then have to go through a protein channel to get across membrane.
In diffusion, the net movement of a substance travels down its concentration gradient. Explain using the image below.
In diffusion the net movement or overall, of a substance will travel from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration.
When diffusion has reached equilibrium, we say that the net movement of the molecules is zero. Does this mean these molecules below would stop moving? Explain using the image below
The molecules will not stop moving. The molecules are continuously moving even when they have reached equilibrium. It is just that the overall movement has moved from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration. In the image below we see the molecules have reached equilibrium, but they are still moving continuously.
receptor-mediated Endocytosis
The movement of specific molecules into a cell by the inward budding of membranous vesicles containing proteins with receptor sites specific to the molecules being taken in; enables a cell to acquire bulk quantities of specific substances.
how are active and passive transport similar
They are similar by how they both transport molecules across the cell membrane.
Which cell part controls active transport?
cell membrane
phosolipid bilayer
cell membrane composed of polar heads and non polar tails
Simple diffusion can occur through a cell membrane! According to the video, what are some cell membrane characteristics that can affect the diffusion rate?
distance, temperature, characteristics of solvent, characteristic of the substance, and characteristic of barrier
heads
hydrophilic (water loving)
tails
hydrophobic (water fearing)
Once inside a cell, what actually kills bacteria that have been swallowed by endocytosis?
lysosomes
simple diffusion
movement of a solute from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration
Does facilitated diffusion require an input of energy?
no
Does simple diffusion require an input of energy?
no
Endocytosis
process by which a cell takes material into the cell by infolding of the cell membrane