What Are Three Things That Determine if a Molecule Will Be Able to Diffuse Across a Cell Membrane?

What Are Three Things That Determine if a Molecule Will Be Able to Diffuse Across a Cell Membrane
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A cell’s well-being depends on its ability to control the passage of molecules across the cell membrane. Some molecules can diffuse through the cell membrane without any assistance from the cell. Others require the help of transmembrane proteins to move into or out of the cell. Three primary factors determine whether a molecule will diffuse across a cell membrane: concentration, charge and size.

TL;DR (Too Long; Didn't Read)

The cell membrane is a barrier between the interior of the cell and the outside world. The ability of a molecule to travel across a membrane depends on its concentration, charge and size. In general, molecules diffuse across membranes from areas of high concentration to low concentration. Cell membranes prevent charged molecules from entering the cell unless the cell maintains an electrical potential. However, small molecules may be able to slip through the membrane regardless of their charge.

The Cell Membrane

A cell membrane contains two layers of phospholipids. Each phospholipid molecule has a hydrophilic phosphate head and two hydrophobic lipid tails. The heads line up along the inner and outer surfaces of the cell membrane, while the tails fill the middle space. Various types of transmembrane proteins provide facilitated diffusion or active transport for molecules that can’t passively diffuse through the cell membrane. Primary active transport requires the cell to expend energy to move molecules through the cell membrane. Diffusion requires no energy from the cell to do so.

Concentration and Diffusion

Diffusion occurs because molecules like to spread out from areas of high concentration to areas of lower concentration. Electrochemical and kinetic energy both power diffusion. The primary determinant of whether a molecule will diffuse across a cell membrane is the concentration of the molecule on each side of the cell membrane. For example, the extracellular concentration of oxygen is higher than the intracellular concentration, which is why oxygen diffuses into the cell. Carbon dioxide diffuses out for similar reasons.

Charge and Polarity

An ion is an atom or molecule that has an outright charge due to an imbalance between the number of protons and electrons. Polarity is an uneven distribution of charge across a molecule, with some partially positive and negative regions. Charged and polarized molecules dissolve in water while uncharged molecules dissolve in lipids. The lipid tails in the cell membrane prevent charged and polarized molecules from diffusing through the cell membrane. However, some cells actively maintain an electric potential on either side of the cell membrane that can attract or repel ions and polarized molecules.

Molecule Size

Some polarized molecules are small enough to slip past the lipid tails. For example, water is a polarized molecule, but its small size allows it to freely diffuse across the cell membrane. This is also true of carbon dioxide, the byproduct of cellular metabolism. Oxygen molecules have no polarity and are also small enough to easily diffuse into the cell. Sugar molecules, which contain five or more carbon atoms, are both polar and too large to diffuse through the cell membrane and must travel through transmembrane proteins.

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