S'identifier

Adenosine triphosphate, or ATP, is considered the primary energy source in cells. However, energy can also be stored in the electrochemical gradient of an ion across the plasma membrane, which is determined by two factors: its chemical and electrical gradients.

The chemical gradient relies on differences in the abundance of a substance on the outside versus the inside of a cell and flows from areas of high to low ion concentration. In contrast, the electrical gradient revolves around an ion’s electrical charge and the overall charges of the intracellular and extracellular environments.

The electrical gradient of a positively-charged ion flows from positive to negative regions, while the reverse is true for negatively-charged ions. It is the combined action of these electrical and chemical factors that determine the ultimate direction of an electrochemical gradient. When an ion moves along this path, down its electrochemical gradient, energy is freed that can then power diverse biological processes.

Tags
Electrochemical GradientCell MembraneIonsSodiumPotassiumConcentration GradientChemical GradientElectrical GradientPositive ChargeNegative ChargeActive TransportMembrane Proteins

Du chapitre 5:

article

Now Playing

5.4 : What is an Electrochemical Gradient?

Membranes and Cellular Transport

107.9K Vues

article

5.1 : What are Membranes?

Membranes and Cellular Transport

146.0K Vues

article

5.2 : Membrane Fluidity

Membranes and Cellular Transport

148.6K Vues

article

5.3 : The Fluid Mosaic Model

Membranes and Cellular Transport

138.0K Vues

article

5.5 : Diffusion

Membranes and Cellular Transport

182.5K Vues

article

5.6 : Osmosis

Membranes and Cellular Transport

155.0K Vues

article

5.7 : Tonicity in Animals

Membranes and Cellular Transport

115.6K Vues

article

5.8 : Tonicity in Plants

Membranes and Cellular Transport

52.6K Vues

article

5.9 : Introduction to Membrane Proteins

Membranes and Cellular Transport

65.4K Vues

article

5.10 : Facilitated Transport

Membranes and Cellular Transport

122.3K Vues

article

5.11 : Primary Active Transport

Membranes and Cellular Transport

172.0K Vues

article

5.12 : Secondary Active Transport

Membranes and Cellular Transport

116.2K Vues

article

5.13 : Receptor-mediated Endocytosis

Membranes and Cellular Transport

103.0K Vues

article

5.14 : Pinocytosis

Membranes and Cellular Transport

64.8K Vues

article

5.15 : Phagocytosis

Membranes and Cellular Transport

72.2K Vues

See More

JoVE Logo

Confidentialité

Conditions d'utilisation

Politiques

Recherche

Enseignement

À PROPOS DE JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Tous droits réservés.