permeable
(adjective)
Of or relating to substance, substrate, membrane or material that absorbs or allows the passage of fluids.
Examples of permeable in the following topics:
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Chemiosmosis and Oxidative Phosphorylation
- Chemiosmosis is the movement of ions across a selectively permeable membrane, down their electrochemical gradient.
- The electrons cause conformation changes in the shapes of the proteins to pump H+ across a selectively permeable cell membrane.
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Selective Permeability
- Describe how membrane permeability, concentration gradient, and molecular properties affect biological diffusion rates.
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Introduction to Osmoregulation
- Osmoregulation balances concentrations of solutes and water across semi-permeable membranes, maintaining homeostasis.
- The membranes of the body (such as the pleural, serous, and cell membranes) are semi-permeable: they allow passage of certain types of solutes and water, but not others.
- Solutions on two sides of a semi-permeable membrane tend to equalize in solute concentration by movement of solutes and/or water across the membrane.
- Isotonic cells have an equal concentration of solutes inside and outside the cell; this equalizes the osmotic pressure on either side of the semi-permeable membrane.
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The Plasma Membrane and the Cytoplasm
- The membrane's lipid bilayer structure provides the cell with access control through permeability.
- This structure causes the membrane to be selectively permeable.
- A membrane that has selective permeability allows only substances meeting certain criteria to pass through it unaided.
- Osmosis is the diffusion of water through a semi-permeable membrane down its concentration gradient.
- If a membrane is permeable to water, though not to a solute, water will equalize its own concentration by diffusing to the side of lower water concentration (and thus the side of higher solute concentration).
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Osmosis
- Semipermeable membranes, also termed selectively permeable membranes or partially permeable membranes, allow certain molecules or ions to pass through by diffusion.
- In the diagram shown, the solute cannot pass through the selectively permeable membrane, but the water can.
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Transport of Electrolytes across Cell Membranes
- Water passes through semi-permeable membranes by passive diffusion, moving along a concentration gradient and equalizing the concentration on either side of the membrane.
- Electrolyte ions may not be able to passively diffuse across a membrane, but may instead require special mechanisms to cross the semi-permeable membrane.
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Components of Plasma Membranes
- Composed of a phospholipid bilayer with embedded proteins, the plasma membrane is selectively permeable to ions and organic molecules and regulates the movement of substances in and out of cells.
- The movement of a substance across the selectively permeable plasma membrane can be either "passive"—i.e., occurring without the input of cellular energy—or "active"—i.e., its transport requires the cell to expend energy.
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Hormonal Control of Blood Calcium Levels
- If calcium levels get too high, membrane permeability to sodium decreases and membranes become less responsive.
- If calcium levels get too low, membrane permeability to sodium increases and convulsions or muscle spasms may result.
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The Role of Passive Transport
- In other words, plasma membranes are selectively permeable; they allow some substances to pass through, but not others.
- Diffusion through a permeable membrane moves a substance from an area of high concentration (extracellular fluid, in this case) down its concentration gradient (into the cytoplasm).
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Kidney Function and Physiology
- In the loop of Henle, the permeability of the membrane changes.
- The descending limb is permeable to water, not solutes; the opposite is true for the ascending limb.
- The descending limb is water permeable.