Diffusion, osmosis, tonicity Flashcards
Diffusion
Allows for the passive movement of molecules across various biological borders from an area of high concentration to low concentrations resulting in an equal distribution
No energy required
Can occur in gasses, liquids, solids
Types of diffusion
- paracellular transport
- transcellular transport
Paracellular transport
movement across barrier in between cells
driven by gradients
What regulates paracellular transport?
Regulated by tight and adherens junctions between endothelial cells. The number of junctions on the lateral surface of the epithelial cells can greatly influence regulation (can be tight or leaky)
Transcellular transport
Movement across cells. Driven by active processes such as transport proteins, pumps, and receptors
Factors influencing rate of diffusion
Based on Fick’s Law.
Directly proportional factors
* Concentration gradient
* Surface area where diffusion occurs
Inversely proportional
* Solvent viscosity (thickness)- the thicker the particles, the slower diffusion will be
* Radius of diffusing particles- larger the particles, slower the diffusion
Oxygen transport
Passive diffusion. Oxygen will move from areas of high partial pressure to areas of low partial pressure.
Reason why hemoglobin picks up oxygen in RBCs so that more oxygen will come inside the cells
Hydrated shells of ions
Ions become hydrated when surrounded by water in solution. Diffusion is affected by ion size, and their hydrated shells might be even larger.
Ex. K ions are larger than Na ions, BUT Na attract more water than K. So Na is larger in the long run and is slower to diffuse
Electrochemical gradient
Determines ion movement.
Ions will move from high to low concentrations AND towards opposite charges.
When both of these gradients are working together, diffusion will be much faster.
Osmosis
Diffusion describing the movement of water from high to low concentration across a semi-permeable membrane.
Osmotic pressure
The amount of solutes within the water which determine which way water will move.
The higher the solutes in water, the higher the osmotic pressure. Water will move towards the area with the most solutes.
This is because if there are more solutes taking up space then there would be less water.
Osmosis in the blood
- Hydrostatic pressure pushes water out to interstitial space
- Osmotic pressure draws water into interstitial space
Effective osmolarity or Tonicity
The ability of a solution to initiate water movement.
Depends on impermeable solutes or effective osmoles.
Effective osmoles
sodium, glucose in diabetic patients
Ineffective osmoles
urea (very permeable so when cells are very active, the urea will move out of bloodstream)