Premium Only Content
Cell Biology: Active Transport
For Employees of hospitals, schools, universities and libraries: download up to 8 FREE medical animations from Nucleus by signing up for a free trial at: http://nmal.nucleusmedicalmedia.com/biology_youtube
SCIENCE ANIMATION TRANSCRIPT: In this video, we'll discuss active transport. Active transport is when particles move from an area of low concentration to high concentration. This is also known as moving against the concentration gradient. The key thing to remember is that active transport requires energy. If passive transport is like a ball naturally rolling down a hill, active transport is the opposite. You can get the ball back up the hill, but you're going to have to expend some energy to do it. Cells require this type of substance movement in order to function properly. For example, heart muscle cells responsible for making your heart beat, move molecules or ions against their concentration gradient. So, what are some of the main types of active transport? We have endocytosis, exocytosis, and protein pumps. Sometimes a cell uses active transport to pull in large particles using its cell membrane. This is called endocytosis. One type of endocytosis is called phagocytosis. This often happens when the cell takes in some type of nutrient. In another type of endocytosis called pinocytosis, the cell takes in fluids by creating pockets in the cell membrane. The cell can ingest a large amount of fluid this way by pinching off these cell membrane pockets into the cytoplasm. The opposite of endocytosis is exocytosis. Exocytosis is when something needs to exit the cell. The cell can remove large molecules or wastes this way by fusing the membrane bound vesicles containing them with the cell membrane, forcing them out of the cell. A good way to remember that exocytosis is a way for things to leave the cell is that it shares the first two letters with exit. You can also remember that endocytosis is a way for things to move into the cell because each shares the first two letters with enter. Sometimes the cell uses special protein pumps to move small molecules or ions against the concentration gradient into or out of the cell. An example of this is the sodium potassium pump. In this process, the pump uses energy in the form of ATP molecules to move sodium ions out of the cell and then move potassium ions into the cell. Protein pumps used an active transport require energy because the molecules or ions are moving from an area of low concentration to high concentration. In summary, active transport is when the cell uses energy to move substances in or out of the cell against the concentration gradient via endocytosis, exocytosis, or protein pumps. [music]
NSV15009
-
20:02
WhatCulture - Film
3 days ago20 Movie Reveals Nobody Noticed
351 -
6:49
RidiculousRides
20 hours agoPeel P50: The 59kg Car You Can Park Indoors
7391 -
13:02
WhatCulture Gaming
1 day ago10 Video Games That Broke The Rules
460 -
2:12:02
Battlefront: Frontline with Dustin Faulkner
11 hours agoThe DoJ Leadership Reveals Failure to the People with Epstein Files During Bondi Testimony | Has the GOP Lost the Midterms with Bad Focus | Trust in Media and Government Definitely Failing in the West
1.06K1 -
7:58
CinemaBlend
1 day ago'The Penguin' Interviews With Colin Farrell, Cristin Milioti, Matt Reeves And More
391 -
22:33
Welker Farms
1 day ago $6.49 earned$4,000 Leak? Let's Crack It Open & Investigate!
47.5K4 -
20:42
Jasmin Laine
15 hours agoSupreme Court CANCELS Election Win—Liberal MP LOSES It After VIRAL Clip HAUNTS Him
32.1K29 -
15:03
tactical_rifleman
22 hours ago $6.81 earnedGriffin Armament MK2 Review
23.3K7 -
4:56
Paul Joseph Watson
2 days agoThey Tried to Cover It Up... Now We Know Why
90.3K71 -
12:03
Actual Justice Warrior
1 day agoLow IQ Criminal SNITCHES On HIMSELF
35.4K31