Question from activity 4 in Biozone
Why don't red blood cells in a 0.3 mol glucose solution haemolyse even though glucose is transported across the membrane?
My guess is that for some reason the glucose concentrations inside the cells never exceed the extracellular glucose concentration, which means water can never enter the cell via osmosis meaning the red blood cells can not haemolyse, but this is just an educated guess. Am I close?
Hey,
You’ve got the general idea, I think you are looking at the question slightly wrong though, as it specifically refers to glucose travelling across the membrane, not water. I can see four ways this question could be interpreted, either:
1. The solution is hypotonic to the cell, but as glucose can cross the membrane, it exits the cell (making the solutions isotonic) rather than water entering, therefore it doesn’t burst.
2. The solution is hypertonic to the cell, so glucose moves into the cell, however it is not enough volume increase to cause it to burst.
3. The solution is hypotonic to the cell, so water enters, however it is pumped out through active transport.
4. The solution and the cell are isotonic, so whilst glucose/water can cross the membrane, there is no
net movement.
I would say that most likely to least likely is 4, 2, 1, 3 but I haven’t done biozone questions, so I don’t know what they expect.