2.8 Tonicity And Osmoregulation Flashcards

1
Q

What is tonicity?

A

The ability of an extracellular solution to cause a cell to gain or lose water

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2
Q

What does tonicity depend on?

A

Depends on the concentration of solute that CANNOT pass through the cell membrane

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3
Q

Cells can be in three types of solutions. What are they?

A

Isotonic, hypertonic, hypotonic

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4
Q

What is Osmoregulation? (2)

A
  • cells must be able to regulate their solute concentrations and maintain water balance
  • animal cells will react differently than cells with cell walls, like plants, fungi, and some protists
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5
Q

What does it mean when a cell is inside an isotonic solution? (3)

A
  • The concentration of non-penetrating solutes inside the cell is equal to that outside the cell
  • so the cell immersed in an isotonic solution have no net movement of water
  • water diffuses in the cell at the same rate water moves out of the cell
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6
Q

What does the cell immersed in a hypertonic solution mean? (4)

A
  • The concentration of non-penetrating solute is higher outside of the cell
  • water will move to the extra cellular fluid
  • The cell will lose water to the extracellular surroundings
  • The cell will travel and die (plasmolyze)
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7
Q

What is plasmolysis?

A
  • vacuole shrinks and the plasma membrane pulls away from the cell
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8
Q

What does it mean when a cell is immersed in a hypotonic solution? (4)

A
  • The concentration of non-penetrating solute is lower outside of the cell than inside the cell
  • The cell will gain water
  • animal cells will swell and lyse
  • plant cells work optimaly
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9
Q

when a cell is immersed in a hypotonic solution, why do animal cells lyse, wild plant cells do not?

A

Animal cells have no central vacuole to hold extra water, which is why they swell

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10
Q

What is water potential? (2)

A

A physical property that predicts the direction water will flow
- includes the effect of solute concentration and osmotic pressure

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11
Q

Which way does water flow in? (4)

A
  • From hypo to hyper
  • From high water potential to areas of low water potential
  • From low solute to areas of high solute concentration
  • From high pressure to areas of low pressure (ex. Toothpaste)
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12
Q

What is the WATER POTENTIAL formula, and what does each symbol mean?

A

Ψ = ΨS + ΨP

  • ΨS is solute potential (osmotic potential)
  • ΨP is pressure potential
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13
Q

In terms of solute potential, what does an increase in solute cause? (3)

A
  • causes binding to more free water
    — this reduces water potential
  • expressed as a negative number bc it can pull more water towards in (think salt pulls more water)
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14
Q

What is pure water’s solute potential?

A

0 MPa

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15
Q

What is pressure potential?

A
  • The physical pressure on a solution
  • can be positive or negative relative to atmospheric pressure
  • “open air” means ΨP is 0 MPa
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16
Q

What is the formula for solute potential? What does each symbol mean?

A
ΨS = - iCRT
-i is ionization constant
C is molar concentration
R is pressure constant (0.0831 Lbars/ mol k)
T is temp in kelvin (273+)
17
Q

What is an ionization constant?

A
  • Number of particles formed
  • if no ions are formed, the ionization constant is 1 (sucrose)
  • salt has an ionization constant of 2
18
Q

Why does salt have an ionization constant of (-) two?

A

Because when one mole of NaCl ionizes in H2O, u have 1 M Na+ and 1 M of Cl-, therefore 2

19
Q

What is the main rule of water potential?

A

High water potential goes to low water potential (search 57 in book)

20
Q

Why does high solute concentration pull water towards it? (2)

A
  • Salt has attractive forces that move water towards it

- this creates more space for water to move into the new system