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Photosynthesis

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CO2 initially ends up on a molecule called 3-PGA or phosphoglyceric acid ... Make phosphoglycolate (2C) and PGA no CO2 used in this reaction ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Photosynthesis


1
Chapter 10
  • Photosynthesis

2
Photosynthetic Organisms
  • All are autotrophs make organic compounds from
    inorganic compounds
  • use sunlight to convert CO2 and H2O into sugar
    and release O2
  • Heterotrophs make organic compounds from organic
    compounds

3
Light
  • Made of packets of energy called photons as well
    as wavelengths
  • smallest unit of light
  • fixed amount of energy per photon which is
    determined by the wavelength
  • longer the wavelength, the lower the energy
    (inversely proportional)
  • Pigments absorb wavelengths and this drives
    photosynthesis
  • also can transmit and reflect light

4
Pigments
  • Organic molecules that have similar but different
    functions
  • Colored because they reflect light that they
    cant absorb
  • Chlorophyll is a series of small rings that
    circle a Mg2 and a hydrophobic tail to anchor it
    in the chloroplast
  • absorbs violet-blue and orange-red light
    wavelengths and important in photosynthesis
  • if metal ion is Fe2 then it is heme as is seen
    in hemoglobin

5
Chlorophyll a
  • Primary pigment, in all photosynthetic organisms
    but the bacterial ones
  • Can see the wavelengths that can be absorbed but
    not green for a or b
  • Chlorophyll b is bluish-green in plants, algae
    and some bacteria
  • only about 50 as much as chlorophyll a

6
Wavelengths of Photosynthesis
  • Since the spectra are not overlapping it
    indicates that there are other pigments involved
    in photosynthesis
  • Some pigments can absorb green wavelengths

7
Other Pigments
  • Called accessory pigments extend the useful
    wavelengths that can be used for photosynthesis
  • Carotenoids are the most common, in all
    photosynthetic organisms
  • red, orange and yellow pigments
  • ?-carotene is most common, splits into 2
    molecules of Vitamin A, see in fall leaf color,
    tomatoes, carrots, squash, banana and avocado
  • add O to carotenes to create xanthophylls which
    are red-yellow pigments in tomatoes, carrots,
    leaves, NOT as good as carotenoids in
    photosynthesis

8
Photosynthesis
  • 2 reactions to make the sugars
  • photochemical reactions occur in the light
    light reactions
  • biochemical reactions do not require light but
    the products of the light reaction to convert CO2
    to sugar
  • dark reaction or Calvin cycle

9
Chloroplasts
  • Site of photosynthesis
  • Organelle in the leaf that is bound by double
    membrane that encloses the stroma which is a
    gel-like solution that has ribosomes, DNA and
    enzymes to make sugar
  • Sacs of membranes that contain the chlorophyll
    and accessory pigments called the thylakoid
    membrane unique to chloroplasts
  • Stacks of thylakoids make up grana

10
Leaf Structure
11
Antennae Complexes
  • Made up of chlorophyll a and other pigments
  • Pick up the energy from the sun and move it down
    to the reaction center which is a unique and
    special chlorophyll a molecule and associated
    proteins
  • Reaction center is an electron acceptor that
    participates in photosynthesis, remaining
    chlorophylls funnel the energy to it

12
Photosystem
  • A photosystem is made of antennae complex,
    reaction center and an acceptor molecule
  • 2 types of photosystems
  • one reaction center absorbs light at 700 nm and
    is P700 participates in photosystem I (PS I)
  • one reaction center absorbs light at 680 nm and
    is P680 participates in photosystem II (PS II)

13
Light Reactions
14
Light Reactions
  • Chloroplasts couple light driven flow of
    electrons between photosystems to make ATP
  • making ATP from light energy is
    photophosphorylation
  • Electron movement drives protons across the
    thylakoid membrane to make a gradient of H
    across the membrane which drives ATP synthesis
    thru ATP synthase
  • Also generate NADPH by the light reaction using
    electron movement carries H and electrons

15
Ecological Significance
  • Light reaction converts light energy into
    chemical energy (ATP and NADPH) and released O2
    into the atmosphere

16
Biochemical Reaction
  • Convert CO2 into carbohydrate
  • Includes the Calvin cycle which is a carbon
    fixation cycle to make the building block sugar
    that ultimately make all the molecules needed by
    the plant

17
Calvin Cycle
  • CO2 initially ends up on a molecule called 3-PGA
    or phosphoglyceric acid
  • It starts out on RuBP (ribulose-1,5-bidphosphate,
    5 C sugar) to make a 6 C molecule that breaks
    down into 3-PGA
  • Also called the photosynthetic carbon reduction
    cycle

18
Steps of Calvin Cycle
19
Details of the Calvin Cycle
  • CO2 comes in the stomata, then to chloroplast
    stroma
  • Enzyme responsible for C fixation is Rubisco
    most important and abundant protein on earth
  • Rubisco assembly is controlled by light as are it
    activators and inhibitors
  • CO2 RuBP 2 3-PGA
  • ATP and NADPH made in light reaction power the
    next 2 steps
  • 3-PGA is converted to PGAL glyceraldehyde 3-PO4
    a 3 C sugar or triose

20
Continuation
  • Some PGAL will become RuBP to renew the cycle
  • Rest of PGAL becomes 1 of 2 things
  • starch in the chloroplast thru additional
    reactions, can be broken down to PGAL at night to
    become sugar
  • move to cytosol to be converted to sucrose
  • Overall reaction
  • 3 CO2 3 RUBP ? 3 RUBP triose-P
  • 4 triose-P ? 1 sucrose 4 Pi
  • Use sucrose to make other organic compounds

ATP, NADPH
21
Rubisco
  • Not a perfect enzyme fuels the loss of C via
    photorespiration
  • Photosynthesis wastes much light energy and does
    poor job of fixing C
  • Increased O2 around the plant can inhibit
    photosynthesis (Warburg effect) air in leaf is
    different than atmospheric air
  • CO2 is only available when stomata is open and
    when there is plenty of water available
  • CO2 is used up when stomata closed and release O2
    that cant leave as stomata is closed
  • alters the CO2 and O2
  • Rubisco can add O to RuBP because it can function
    as a carboxylase or oxigenation enzyme

22
Photorespiration
  • Use O2 rather than CO2
  • Make phosphoglycolate (2C) and PGA no CO2 used
    in this reaction
  • phosphoglycolate leaves the cycle enter
    mitochondria or peroxisome and releases the CO2
    that was previously fixed wasteful
  • PGA may stay in cycle

23
Photorespiration
  • Occurs only in the light
  • Makes no ATP and squanders large amounts of energy

24
C4 Photosynthesis
  • Requires 2 CO2 fixation steps during low CO2
    levels in atmosphere
  • Did an experiment like with C3 plants and found
    CO2 in malic acid and not in 3 C PGA
  • realized that there were different pathways for
    fixing CO2 in different plants
  • Still use the Calvin cycle but only after an
    fixing CO2 in another set of reactions first

25
C4 Plants
  • Found malate in the thin walled mesophyll cells
    that have no Rubisco or other enzymes of the
    Calvin cycle
  • Then saw PGA in the thick walled cells around the
    vascular bundles called the bundle sheath
  • Kranz anatomy

26
Explanation of C4 Photosynthesis
  • CO2 diffuses in thru stomata and into mesophyll
    cells
  • CO2 combines with 3 C compound called
    phosphoenolpyruvic acid (PEP) catalyzed by PEP
    carboxylase to make oxaloacetate (4 C) that moves
    thru plasmodesmata to the bundle sheath cells
  • Bundle sheath cells split it to CO2 and 3 C
    molecule moves back to mesophyll cells and CO2
    stays to be shuttled to Calvin cycle
  • C4 plants keep the CO2 high in bundle sheath
  • CO2 fixed by Rubisco but since O2 is excluded
    from the bundle sheath, it is much more efficient
    at fixing CO2
  • C4 plants avoid photorespiration and have a
    selective advantage over C3 plants in hot, dry
    environments

27
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28
Use of Light in C3 and C4 Plants
  • C4 plants can still fix CO2 even when stomata are
    starting to close as the CO2 is in the
    intracellular spaces
  • also need less water as they dont loose it while
    trying to get CO2
  • Photosynthesis levels off as light intensity goes
    up and C4 can still complete photosynthesis when
    sun is really intense

29
Evolution of C4 Plants
  • In the hot tropics needed to adapt to the heat
    and dryness
  • Many are grasses and all are angiosperms
  • Found in 17 plant families which are not all C4
    plants probably evolved independently
  • Many are monocots and some dicots corn,
    sorghum. sugar cane, millet, crabgrass and
    Bermuda grass
  • 85 of all plants are still C3 plants cereal
    grains, peanuts, sugar beets, tobacco, spinach,
    soybeans, most trees, lawn grasses such as rye,
    fescue and Kentucky bluegrass

30
Crassulacean Acid Metabolism (CAM)
  • 3rd main type of photosynthesis evolved in arid
    ecosystems
  • Started in the jade plants became acidic at
    night and throughout the day became more basic
  • Stomata are open at night and fix CO2 into malic
    acid that is stored in vacuoles in succulent
    cells, stomata close and decrease water loss

31
CAM Plants
  • During the day, CO2 is liberated and fixed by the
    Calvin cycle
  • CAM perform photosynthesis in same cell but
    spatially different areas (vacuole and
    chloroplast) and temporally different (night and
    day)
  • C4 plants fix CO2 in different cells
  • CAM open stomata at night when temperature drops
    and relative humidity is up use water more
    efficiently than C3 plants but grow more slowly
  • CAM plants are more widespread than C4
  • many are succulent but not all succulent are CAM
  • monocots and dicots
  • pineapple, cacti, maternity plant, wax plant,
    Spanish moss

32
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33
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34
Factors That Affect Photosynthesis Rates
  • CO2 affects photosynthesis plants that show
    no net CO2 fixation is said to be CO2
    compensation point increase CO2 can increase
    photosynthesis in C3 but not C4 as it decreases
    the phototranspiration

35
Factors Continued
  • Inability of plants to maintain enough water in
    leaves cause stomata to close no photosynthesis
    lack of water is most limiting factor
  • Metabolic sinks are where sugars are stored and
    used remove sinks and photosynthesis decreases
    drastically, increase when making sinks again
  • No photosynthesis at nights cellular
    respiration make CO2 and is released
  • sun-plants need a lot of light and have high
    compensation point
  • shade-plants grow in low lights and have low
    compensation points and low levels of
    photosynthesis
  • 12 enzymes in Calvin cycle with 5 being limiting
    all 5 activated by light
  • Maximum photosynthesis at noon most light

36
Photosynthate
  • Product of Calvin cycle photosynthate
  • triose-P becomes dense granules of starch in
    chloroplast but mainly roots and stems
  • small amount triose-P to make amino acids in
    chloroplasts
  • triose-P moves out of chloroplast and used in
    cytosol to make sucrose that is moved in phloem
  • ½ sucrose used in cellular respiration and the
    other ½ to make cellulose and cell wall
    components
  • used to make 2 metabolites latex, other fuels
  • use corn to make 90 ethanol to make gasohol
    (10 of gas sales)
  • make 1.5 billion tons of grain for food
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