Diffusion & Facilitated Diffusion (Edexcel A Level Biology (A) SNAB): Revision Note
Diffusion & Facilitated Diffusion
Diffusion is a type of transport that can occur across a cell membrane
Note that diffusion can also happen within a cellular compartment; the presence of a membrane is not essential
It can be defined as the net movement of a substance from a region of its higher concentration to a region of its lower concentration
Net movement refers to the overall direction of movement; in reality molecules in a liquid or gas move in all directions, but most molecules move from a high to a low concentration
The molecules of a liquid or a gas move randomly due to the kinetic energy of the molecules or ions
The molecules or ions move down a concentration gradient
Diffusion is a passive process meaning that it does not require energy in order to occur
Diffusion can be described as passive transport
Diffusion will continue until the concentration of a substance on each side of a membrane has become equal; this is known as equilibrium
Some molecules are able to diffuse directly between the phospholipids of a membrane; this can be described as simple diffusion
Molecules that can move by simple diffusion tend to be small and non-polar
Small molecules can fit between the phospholipids
Non-polar molecules are able to interact with the non-polar tails of the phospholipids
Diffusion can occur across a cell surface membrane. The image above shows the progression of glucose diffusion; on the left of the diagram there is a steep concentration gradient, and by the end of the process on the right of the diagram the glucose concentration has reached equilibrium.
The rate at which a substance diffuses across a membrane depends on several factors
Concentration gradient
Temperature
Surface area
Properties of substance involved
Factors Affecting Diffusion Table
Facilitated diffusion
Some substances cannot diffuse directly through the phospholipid bilayer of cell membranes, e.g.
Large, polar molecules such as glucose and amino acids
Ions such as sodium ions (Na+) and chloride ions (Cl-)
These substances can only cross the phospholipid bilayer with the help of transport proteins; this form of diffusion is known as facilitated diffusion
There are two types of transport protein that enable facilitated diffusion
Channel proteins
Carrier proteins
They are highly specific, meaning that they only allow one type of molecule or ion to pass through
Channel proteins
Channel proteins are pores that extend through the membrane from one side to the other
They allow charged substances, e.g. ions, to diffuse through the cell membrane
The diffusion of these ions does not occur freely; most channel proteins are ‘gated’, meaning that part of the channel protein on the inside surface of the membrane can move in order to close or open the pore
This allows the channel protein to control the exchange of ions
Channel proteins are pores in the cell membrane; they can open and close.
Carrier proteins
Unlike channel proteins which have a fixed shape, carrier proteins can switch between two shapes
This causes the binding site of the carrier protein to be open to one side of the membrane first, and then open to the other side of the membrane when the carrier protein switches shape
The direction of movement of molecules diffusing across the membrane depends on their relative concentration on each side of the membrane
Net diffusion of molecules or ions into or out of a cell via carrier proteins will occur down a concentration gradient
Carrier proteins change shape to transport molecules from one side of a membrane to the other
Examiner Tips and Tricks
Remember that the movement of molecules from high concentration to low concentration is diffusion. If this movement requires the aid of a protein, for example because the molecule is charged and cannot pass directly through the phospholipid bilayer, this is facilitated diffusion.
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