Cell Transport Mechanisms

Extrait de la fiche de révision

Cell Transport Revision Sheet

1. 📌 Essentials

  • Cell transport involves movement of molecules across the semi-permeable membrane.
  • Main types: passive (no energy) and active (energy-dependent).
  • Passive transport includes diffusion, facilitated diffusion, and osmosis.
  • Active transport requires ATP and transport proteins to move molecules against gradients.
  • Osmosis is specifically water movement driven by solute concentration differences.
  • Tonicity determines cell volume changes: isotonic, hypertonic, hypotonic.
  • Plant cells tolerate hypotonic solutions via turgor pressure; animal cells risk lysis.
  • Transport proteins are essential for large, charged, gradient-opposing molecules.
  • Endosis and exocytosis are bulk transport mechanisms.
  • Dynamic equilibrium occurs when molecular movement is balanced.

2. 🧩 Key Structures & Components

  • Cell membrane — semi-permeable barrier controlling substance entry/exit.
  • Transport proteins — facilitate movement of large/charged molecules.
  • Channel proteins — form pores for specific ions or molecules.
  • Carrier proteins — change shape to transport molecules across membrane.
  • Vesicles — membrane-bound sacs for endocytosis/exocytosis.
  • Water channels (aquaporins) — facilitate rapid water movement during osmosis.
  • Solutes — ions, glucose, amino acids, etc., moved via different mechanisms.
  • Concentration gradient — difference in solute concentration across membrane.
Lire la fiche complète →

Aperçu du QCM

1. What distinguishes passive transport from active transport in cell membrane processes?

2. Which of the following best describes passive transport in cell membranes?

3. Which process involves the cell membrane engulfing material by folding inward?

Faire le QCM (9 questions) →

Aperçu des flashcards

Endocytosis — role?

Engulfs material into cell via membrane folding.

Cell transport — definition?

Movement of molecules across membranes.

Tonicity — effect?

Determines cell volume changes by water movement.

Passive vs active transport — difference?

Passive: no energy; active: requires energy.

Passive transport — definition?

Molecule movement without energy, down gradient.

Osmosis — water movement?

Water moves from low to high solute concentration.

Voir toutes les 10 flashcards →

Questions fréquentes

Que contient la fiche de révision sur Cell Transport Mechanisms ?

La fiche de révision couvre les notions essentielles de Cell Transport Mechanisms. Elle est structurée par thématiques pour faciliter l'apprentissage et la mémorisation, avec des définitions clés, des explications et des synthèses.

Lire la fiche complète →

Combien de questions contient le QCM sur Cell Transport Mechanisms ?

Le QCM contient 9 questions à choix multiples avec corrections détaillées et explications pour chaque réponse. Idéal pour tester tes connaissances et identifier tes lacunes.

Faire le QCM (9 questions) →

Comment réviser Cell Transport Mechanisms avec les flashcards ?

Revizly propose 10 flashcards interactives sur Cell Transport Mechanisms. Chaque carte présente une question au recto et la réponse au verso, permettant une révision active et efficace basée sur la répétition espacée.

Voir toutes les 10 flashcards →

Cours similaires

Crée tes propres fiches depuis tes cours

Importe ton PDF ou colle ton cours, l'IA génère fiches, QCM et flashcards en 30 secondes.