BIOL 2030 Lecture Notes - Lecture 5: Carbonic Anhydrase, Microfibril, Choanocyte

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28 May 2019
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Osmoregulation: majority of unicellular organisms have contractile vacuols. Ones in fresh water mostly have contractile vacuoles. Marine animals in high salt level environments don"t generally have it because fresh water gets more diluted. Steps: proton pump ( h+- atpase) primary active transport. Takes protons from the cytoplasm and dumps it into the contractile vacuole. Active transport (can pump against gradient: bicarbonate (hco3) co-transport. The bicarbonate goes across the membrane into the vacuole to try and equalize the charge. Now there"s a high concentration of solutes in the vacuole: passive water diffusion. Water comes in to equalize the solute concentration: cytoplasmic carbonic anhydrase replenishes h+ and hco3. Phylum porifera sponges: attached to substrate and don"t move around, don"t have true tissues, they trap the food particles in the water, water flow also used to reproduce. 3 subtypes of secretory cells: sclerocytes (mineral spicules, spongocytes (spongin spicules, collenocytes (collagen spicules)

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