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Making of A "Fluid Mosaic Model": Hydrophobic Tail

1. The document describes how to construct a model of the fluid mosaic model of the cell membrane using simple materials like ping pong balls, drinking straws, containers, oil, water, and magnets. 2. The model involves attaching drinking straw segments to ping pong balls to represent phospholipids, filling some balls with water and sealing them to represent the hydrophilic heads, and adding weights to other balls to represent the hydrophobic tails. 3. The completed model is layered with salt water on the bottom, the lower ping pong balls, a middle layer of oil, and the upper ping pong balls, to demonstrate the structure and properties of the phospholipid bilayer.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
59 views

Making of A "Fluid Mosaic Model": Hydrophobic Tail

1. The document describes how to construct a model of the fluid mosaic model of the cell membrane using simple materials like ping pong balls, drinking straws, containers, oil, water, and magnets. 2. The model involves attaching drinking straw segments to ping pong balls to represent phospholipids, filling some balls with water and sealing them to represent the hydrophilic heads, and adding weights to other balls to represent the hydrophobic tails. 3. The completed model is layered with salt water on the bottom, the lower ping pong balls, a middle layer of oil, and the upper ping pong balls, to demonstrate the structure and properties of the phospholipid bilayer.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Model Making.........

1. Making of a “Fluid Mosaic Model”

The idea of the fluid mosaic model can be demonstrated using a model (Fig.1) made
of simple materials: ping-pong balls, drinking straws, a plastic container, oil and
water.

Hydrophobic tail

Phospholipid bilayer

Hydrophilic head

Fig.1

1. Cut the drinking straws into 2-3cm long


segments.
2. Use a glue gun to stick each ping-pong with
2 drinking straw segments. (Fig.2 and 3)
3. Divide the ping-pong balls into 2 groups.
One group serves as the phospholipids of the
upper layer, the other group serves as the Fig.2

phospholipids of the lower layer. (The


number of ping-pong ball used depends on
the size of container used.)
4. For the upper group of ping-pong balls, stick
some weights (plasticine) at the open end of
the drinking straws.
Fig.3
2.........Model Making

5. For the lower group of ping-pong balls, drill


a small hole at the ping-pong ball (Fig.4).
Fill the ping-pong ball up with water (Fig.5),
and seal it with the glue gun (Fig.6). Then
seal the open end of the drinking straw with
the glue gun (Fig.7), so that each drinking
straw is trapped with air. Fig.4
6. Add the followings according to the
sequence below: salt water, lower group of
ping pong balls, oil and upper group of ping
pong balls.

Fig.5

Fig.6 Fig.7
Note
1. Ask students to observe and compare the model constructed with the concept of
fluid mosaic model.
2. The movement of molecule across the membrane can be simulated by moving a
magnet with another magnet.

magnets

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