The Calvin Cycle
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Transcript The Calvin Cycle
The Calvin Cycle
Also known as the dark
reaction
Carbon Fixation by the Calvin Cycle
From
the light reaction,
NADPH, ATP and oxygen
was produced.
Carbon fixation: C is bonded,
or fixed, into an organic
compound
Calvin cycle has 3 major steps
occurring in the stroma
Step One
Carbon dioxide diffuses into
the stroma from the
surrounding cytosol
An
enzyme combines CO2
with RuBP, a 5 carbon
molecule
The 6 carbon molecules splits
into two 3-C molecules called
PGA
Step Two
PGA is converted into another 3C molecule called PGAL
Each PGA gains a phosphate
from a molecule of ATP
This compound receives a
proton (H+) from NADPH, then
releases the phosphate group.
The resulting NADP+, ADP and
phosphate go back to the light reaction
Step Three
Most
of the PGAL is
converted back to RuBP by
using up a phosphate from
ATP, making ADP
So RuBP actually begins
and ends the Calvin Cycle.
Where’d that other Carbon go
Some
PGAL and other molecules
made in the Calvin cycle are used
to make amino acids, lipids, and
carbohydrates.
Carbohydrates include glucose,
fructose, sucrose, glycogen,
starch, and cellulose.
How Many?
PGAL
is a 3-C molecule, and
one turn of the Calvin cycle
fixes one carbon, so it takes 3
turns of the cycle to make 1
PGAL.
For 3 turns, 9 molecules of
ATP and 6 molecules of
NADPH are used.
Equations
+ H2O + light energy
(CH2O) + O2
CO2
6CO2
+ 6H2O + light energy
C6H12O6 + 6O2
light-independent reactions
in stroma of chloroplast
light-dependent
reactions at
thylakoids of
chloroplast
light
12H2O
LIGHT-DEPENDENT
REACTIONS
ADP + ATP
Pi
6CO2
6O
CO2 into leaf
O2 out
2
NADP NADPH
+
PGA CALVIN- PGAL
BENSON
CYCLE
RuBP
6H2O
P
C6H12O
6
(phosphorylated glucose)
end product (e.g. sucrose, starch, cellulose)
Fig. 6.17, p. 127
Rate of Photosynthesis
Rate is affected by the
environment
As light increases, the rate
increases then levels off.
As temperature increases, the
rate increases, hits a peak, then
declines.
As CO2 levels increase, the rate
increases then levels off
Conclusion and Dark Reaction Chart
Location – Stroma, fluid in the
chloroplast surrounding the Thylakoid
membranes
Function – produce carbohydrates,
(glucose)
Reactants – Carbon Dioxide, RuBP,
ATP and NADPH+
Products – Glucose, ADP and
NADP