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Osmosis and plant transport (CCEA)Osmosis in cells

Osmosis is the diffusion of water molecules from a dilute solution (high concentration of water) to a more concentrated solution (low concentration of water) across a selectively permeable membrane.

Part of Combined ScienceBody systems

Osmosis in cells

The movement of water into or out of a cell depends on the of water surrounding it.

Animal cells

When water moves into an animal cell (e.g. a red blood cell), the cell membrane stretches and the cell gets bigger.

If this continues, the cell membrane will burst 鈥 this is called lysis.

Turgidity in plant cells

When water moves into a plant cell, the gets bigger, pushing the cell membrane against the cell wall.

Water entering the cell by osmosis inflates the cell and makes it rigid

The force of this increases the turgor pressure within the cell making it firm or .

The pressure created by the cell wall stops too much water entering and prevents cell lysis.

If plants do not receive enough water the cells cannot remain turgid and the plant wilts.

Cells that are not turgid are .

Plasmolysis

When too much water moves out of a plant cell, the cell contents shrink.

This pulls the cell membrane away from the cell wall.

Loss of water makes the cell limp and shrinks the cell membrane

A plasmolysed cell is unlikely to survive.

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