Sections
                          Key Terms
                      Key Terms
- active transport
 - a method of transporting material that requires energy
 
- amphiphilic
 - a molecule that possesses a polar or charged area and a nonpolar or uncharged area, and is capable of interacting with both hydrophilic and hydrophobic environments
 
- antiporter
 - a transporter that carries two ions or small molecules in different directions
 
- aquaporin
 - a channel protein that allows water to pass through the membrane at a very high rate
 
- carrier protein
 - a membrane protein that moves a substance across the plasma membrane by changing its own shape
 
- caveolin
 - a protein that coats the cytoplasmic side of the plasma membrane and participates in the process of liquid uptake by potocytosis
 
- channel protein
 - a membrane protein that allows a substance to pass through its hollow core across the plasma membrane
 
- clathrin
 - a protein that coats the inward-facing surface of the plasma membrane and assists in the formation of specialized structures, such as coated pits, for phagocytosis
 
- concentration gradient
 - an area of high concentration adjacent to an area of low concentration
 
- diffusion
 - a passive process of the movement of low-molecular-weight material according to its concentration gradient
 
- electrochemical gradient
 - a gradient produced by the combined forces of an electrical gradient and a chemical gradient
 
- electrogenic pump
 - a pump that creates a charge imbalance
 
- endocytosis
 - a type of active transport that moves substances, including fluids and particles, into a cell
 
- exocytosis
 - a process of passing bulk material out of a cell
 
- facilitated transport
 - a process by which material moves down a concentration gradient (from high to low concentration) using integral membrane proteins
 
- fluid mosaic model
 - describes the structure of the plasma membrane as a mosaic of components, including phospholipids, cholesterol, proteins, glycoproteins, and glycolipids (sugar chains attached to proteins or lipids, respectively), resulting in a fluid character (fluidity)
 
- glycolipid
 - a combination of carbohydrates and lipids
 
- glycoprotein
 - a combination of carbohydrates and proteins
 
- hydrophilic
 - a molecule with the ability to bond with water; (water-loving)
 
- hydrophobic
 - a molecule that does not have the ability to bond with water; (water-hating)
 
- hypertonic
 - a situation in which extracellular fluid has a higher osmolarity than the fluid inside the cell, resulting in water moving out of the cell
 
- hypotonic
 - a situation in which extracellular fluid has a lower osmolarity than the fluid inside the cell, resulting in water moving into the cell
 
- integral protein
 - a protein integrated into the membrane structure that interacts extensively with the hydrocarbon chains of membrane lipids and often spans the membrane; these proteins can be removed only by the disruption of the membrane by detergents
 
- isotonic
 - a situation in which the extracellular fluid has the same osmolarity as the fluid inside the cell, resulting in no net movement of water into or out of the cell
 
- osmolarity
 - the total amount of substances dissolved in a specific amount of solution
 
- osmosis
 - the transport of water through a semipermeable membrane according to the concentration gradient of water across the membrane due to the presence of solute that cannot pass through the membrane
 
- passive transport
 - a method of transporting material through a membrane that does not require energy
 
- peripheral protein
 - a protein found at the surface of a plasma membrane on either its exterior or interior side; these proteins can be removed (washed off the membrane) by a high-salt wash
 
- pinocytosis
 - a variation of endocytosis that imports macromolecules from the extracellular fluid that the cell needs
 
- plasmolysis
 - the detaching of the cell membrane from the cell wall and constriction of the cell membrane when a plant cell is in a hypertonic solution
 
- potocytosis
 - a variation of pinocytosis that uses a different coating protein (caveolin) on the cytoplasmic side of the plasma membrane
 
- primary active transport
 - the active transport that moves ions or small molecules across a membrane, and may create a difference in charge across that membrane
 
- pump
 - the active transport mechanism that works against electrochemical gradients
 
- receptor-mediated endocytosis
 - a variation of endocytosis that involves the use of specific binding proteins in the plasma membrane for specific molecules or particles, and clathrin-coated pits that become clathrin-coated vesicles
 
- secondary active transport
 - the movement of material that is due to the electrochemical gradient established by primary active transport
 
- selectively permeable
 - a characteristic of a membrane that allows some substances through but not others
 
- solute
 - a substance dissolved in a liquid that forms a solution
 
- symporter
 - a transporter that carries two different ions or small molecules, both in the same direction
 
- tonicity
 - the amount of solute in a solution
 
- transport protein
 - a membrane protein that facilitates the passage of a substance across a membrane by binding to it
 
- transporter
 - a specific carrier proteins or pumps that facilitate movement
 
- uniporter
 - a transporter that carries one specific ion or molecule