2.8 Tonicity And Osmoregulation Flashcards
What is tonicity?
The ability of an extracellular solution to cause a cell to gain or lose water
What does tonicity depend on?
Depends on the concentration of solute that CANNOT pass through the cell membrane
Cells can be in three types of solutions. What are they?
Isotonic, hypertonic, hypotonic
What is Osmoregulation? (2)
- 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
What does it mean when a cell is inside an isotonic solution? (3)
- 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
What does the cell immersed in a hypertonic solution mean? (4)
- 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)
What is plasmolysis?
- vacuole shrinks and the plasma membrane pulls away from the cell
What does it mean when a cell is immersed in a hypotonic solution? (4)
- 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
when a cell is immersed in a hypotonic solution, why do animal cells lyse, wild plant cells do not?
Animal cells have no central vacuole to hold extra water, which is why they swell
What is water potential? (2)
A physical property that predicts the direction water will flow
- includes the effect of solute concentration and osmotic pressure
Which way does water flow in? (4)
- 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)
What is the WATER POTENTIAL formula, and what does each symbol mean?
Ψ = ΨS + ΨP
- ΨS is solute potential (osmotic potential)
- ΨP is pressure potential
In terms of solute potential, what does an increase in solute cause? (3)
- 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)
What is pure water’s solute potential?
0 MPa
What is pressure potential?
- The physical pressure on a solution
- can be positive or negative relative to atmospheric pressure
- “open air” means ΨP is 0 MPa