Transcript File
Chapter 10: Photosynthesis Life from Light
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Energy needs of life
All life needs a constant input of energy
Heterotrophs
get their energy from “eating others”
consumers of other organisms
consume organic molecules
Autotrophs
get their energy from “self”
get their energy from sunlight
use light energy to synthesize organic
molecules
Chemoautotrophs
Harvest energy from oxidizing inorganic
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substances such as sulfur and ammonia
Unique to bacteria
How are they connected?
Heterotrophs
making energy & organic molecules from ingesting organic molecules
glucose + oxygen carbon + water + energy
dioxide
C6H12O6 +
6O2
6CO2 + 6H2O + ATP
Autotrophs
making energy & organic molecules from light energy
carbon + water + energy glucose + oxygen
dioxide
6CO2 + 6H2O + light C6H12O6 + 6O2
energy
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Energy cycle
sun
Photosynthesis
CO2
H 2O
glucose
Cellular Respiration
The Great Circle
of Life!
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ATP
O2
What does it mean to be a plant
Need to…
collect light energy
transform it into chemical energy
store light energy
in a stable form to be moved around the plant
& also saved for a rainy day
need to get building block atoms from
the environment
C,H,O,N,P,S
produce all organic molecules needed for
growth
carbohydrates, proteins, lipids, nucleic acids
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Plant structure
Obtaining raw materials
sunlight
leaves = solar collectors
CO2
stomates = gas exchange
regulation
Found under leaves
H2O
uptake from roots
nutrients
uptake from roots
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Structure of the Leaf
Mesophyll
Tissue forming the
interior of the leaf; site
of most chlorophyll
Stomata
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Microscopic pores in
the leaf; allows for gas
exchange
Each Mesophyll Cell:
Has approx. 30-40
chloroplasts
Each chloroplast is
equipped to carry
out photosynthesis
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Plant structure
Chloroplasts
double membrane
stroma
thylakoid sacs
grana stacks
Chlorophyll & ETC in
thylakoid membrane
H+ gradient built up
within thylakoid sac
H+
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+
+ H + H H+
+
H
H
+ H+ H+ H+
+
H
H
Structure of the Chloroplast
Chlorophyll
Photosynthetic pigment
found in the thylakoid
Thylakoid
Membranous sacs filled
with fluid and chlorophyll
– Site of the LIGHT
REACTIONS
Granum = Stack of
Thylakoids
Stroma
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Fluid portion of the
chloroplast; sight of the
LIGHT INDEPENDENT
REACTIONS (CalvinBenson Cycle)
Chloroplasts split water molecules
Evidence
Discovery that the O2 given off by plants
comes from H2O not CO2
Before the 1930’s the hypothesis was
that photosynthesis occurred in two
steps:
1. CO2 C + O2
2. C+ H2O CH2O
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Chloroplasts Split Water Molecules:
Changing the Hypothesis
Studying bacteria, C.B. van Neil challenged
the hypothesis:
H2S was used, not water
Proposed the following Rxn
CO2 + 2H2S CH2O +2S
Applied the same principle to plants
CO2 + 2H20 + light CH2O +O2
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Pigments of photosynthesis
chlorophyll & accessory
Why does this
structure
make sense?
pigments
“photosystem”
embedded in thylakoid
membrane
structure function
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Pigments of Photosynthesis Continued
Leaves look green because
they absorb red and blue light,
while transmitting and
reflecting green light
Chlorophyll A
Dominant pigment – absorbs
red/blue
Chlorophyll B
Directs photons to chlorophyll A
Funnel energy from other
wavelengths to Chlorophyll A
(mostly orange/yellow)
Carotenoids
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Light: Absorption Spectra
Photosynthesis performs work only with
absorbed wavelengths of light
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chlorophyll a — the dominant pigment —
absorbs best in red & blue wavelengths & least
in green
other pigments with different structures have
different absorption spectra
Photosynthesis overview
Light reactions – Light Dependent Rxns
convert solar energy to chemical energy
ATP
Calvin cycle – Light Independent Rxns
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uses chemical
energy (NADPH & ATP)
to reduce CO2 to
build C6H12O6 (sugars)
Photosystems
Photosystems
collections of chlorophyll molecules
2 photosystems in thylakoid membrane
act as light-gathering “antenna complex”
Photosystem II
chlorophyll a
P680 = absorbs 680nm
wavelength red light
Photosystem I
chlorophyll b
P700 = absorbs 700nm
wavelength red light
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Light reactions
Similar to ETC in cellular respiration
membrane-bound proteins in organelle
electron acceptors
NADP+ (Oxygen in cellular respiration)
proton (H+)
gradient across
inner membrane
ATP synthase
enzyme
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ETC of Photosynthesis
ETC produces from light energy
ATP & NADPH
NADPH (stored energy) goes to Calvin cycle
PS II absorbs light
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excited electron passes from chlorophyll to
“primary electron acceptor” at the REACTION
CENTER.
splits H2O (Photolysis!!)
O2 released to atmosphere
ATP is produced for later use
ETC of Photosynthesis
Chloroplasts transform light
energy into chemical energy
of ATP
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use electron carrier NADPH
split H2O
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2 Photosystems
Light reactions
elevate electrons in
2 steps (PS II & PS I)
PS II generates
energy as ATP
PS I generates
reducing power as
NADPH
This shows Noncyclic
photophosphorylation.
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ETC of Photosynthesis
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ETC of Photosynthesis
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Cyclic photophosphorylation
If PS I can’t pass
electron to NADP,
it cycles back to
PS II & makes
more ATP, but no
NADPH
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coordinates light
reactions to Calvin
cycle
Calvin cycle uses
more ATP than
NADPH
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Photosynthesis summary so far…
Where did the energy come from?
Where did the H2O come from?
Where did the electrons come from?
Where did the O2 come from?
Where did the H+ come from?
Where did the ATP come from?
Where did the O2 go?
What will the ATP be used for?
What will the NADPH be used for?
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From Light reactions to Calvin cycle
Calvin cycle
Chloroplast stroma
Need products of light reactions to
drive synthesis reactions
ATP
NADPH
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From CO2 C6H12O6
CO2 has very little chemical energy
fully oxidized
C6H12O6 contains a lot of chemical energy
reduced
endergonic
Reduction of CO2 C6H12O6 proceeds in
many small uphill steps
each catalyzed by specific enzyme
using energy stored in ATP & NADPH
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Calvin cycle
1C
ribulose bisphosphate
3. Regeneration
RuBP
3 ATP
PGAL
to make
glucose
5C
1. Carbon fixation
Rubisco
ribulose
bisphosphate
carboxylase
3 ADP
PGAL
sucrose
cellulose
etc.
CO2
6C
unstable
intermediate
2x 3C
3C x2
PGA
2. Reduction
6 ATP
6 NADPH
6 NADP
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2x
3C
6 ADP
Rubisco
Enzyme which fixes carbon from
atmosphere
ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase
the most important enzyme in the world!
it makes life out of air!
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definitely the most abundant enzyme
Calvin cycle
PGAL
end product of Calvin cycle
energy rich sugar
3 carbon compound
“C3 photosynthesis”
PGAL important intermediate
PGAL
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glucose carbohydrates
lipids
amino acids
nucleic acids
Photosynthesis summary
Light reactions
produced ATP
produced NADPH
consumed H2O
produced O2 as byproduct
Calvin cycle
consumed CO2
produced PGAL
regenerated ADP
regenerated NADP
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Summary of photosynthesis
6CO2 + 6H2O + light C6H12O6 + 6O2
energy
Where did the CO2 come from?
Where did the CO2 go?
Where did the H2O come from?
Where did the H2O go?
Where did the energy come from?
What’s the energy used for?
What will the C6H12O6 be used for?
Where did the O2 come from?
Where will the O2 go?
What else is involved that is not listed in this
equation?
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Photosynthesis Drives Evolution
Photosynthesis first evolved in
prokaryotic organisms
Scientific evidence supports that
prokaryotic (bacterial) photosynthesis
responsible for production of an
oxygenated atmosphere
Prokaryotic photosynthetic pathways –
foundation of eukaryotic photosynthesis
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Plant Photosynthesis Adaptations
Due to Weather Conditions
C3
C4
Minimize the cost of photorespiration by
incorporating CO2 into four carbon compounds in
mesophyll cells
4 carbon compounds exported to bundle sheath
cells, where they release CO2 used in the Calvin
cycle
CAM
Open their stomata at night, incorporating CO2 into
organic acids
During the day, the stomata close and the CO2 is
released from the organic acids for use in the
Calvin cycle
Most common type
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C4 Plants
Mesophyll
cell
Mesophyll cell
Photosynthetic
cells of C4 plant
leaf
CO
CO
2 2
PEP carboxylase
Bundlesheath
cell
PEP (3 C)
ADP
Oxaloacetate (4 C)
Vein
(vascular tissue)
Malate (4 C)
ATP
C4 leaf anatomy
BundleSheath
cell
Pyruate (3 C)
CO2
Stoma
CALVIN
CYCLE
Sugar
Vascular
tissue
Figure 10.19
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C4 and CAM Plants
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