Photosynthesis - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Photosynthesis

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Title: Photosynthesis


1
Photosynthesis
  • biology 1

2
  • Photosynthesis plays a key role in
    photo-autotrophic existence
  • Photosynthesis is a redox process, occurring in
    chloroplasts, and involves two reactions
  • Light dependent reaction
  • Light independent reaction (Calvin Cycle)
  • Pigments in chloroplasts are keyed to react to
    specific wavelengths of light
  • There are different strategies to photosynthesis,
    including the C3, C4 and CAM pathways

3
The importance of photosynthesis
  • Life on Earth is balanced between autotrophs
    (self-feeders) and heterotrophs
    (other-feeders)
  • Autotrophs synthesize complex organic molecules
    (e.g., sugar), utilizing energy from
  • Light (photo-autotrophs)
  • Oxidation of inorganics (chemo-autotrophs
  • Autotrophs responsible for producing organic
    molecules that enter ecosystem

4
Photosynthesis as a redox process
  • A general equation for photosynthesis is
  • 6CO2 12H2O C6H12O6 6O2 6H2O
  • Indicating the net consumption of water
    simplifies the equation to
  • 6CO2 6H2O C6H12O6 6O2
  • The simplest form of equation is
  • CO2 H2O CH2O O2
  • Thus 6 repetitions of the equation produce a
    molecule of glucose

light
5
Where does the oxygen come from?
  • Van Niel demonstrated in chemo-autotrophs that
  • CO2 2H2S CH2O H2O 2S
  • Therefore, a general form for the synthesis
    equation
  • CO2 2H2X CH2O H2O 2X
  • Van Niel summarized that oxygen comes from water
    (later confirmed with radio-isotopes)

6
Photosynthesis as a redox process
  • Hydrogen is extracted from water and incorporated
    into sugar
  • Electrons have higher potential energy in the
    sugar molecule
  • Light is the energy source that boosts the
    potential energy of electrons as they are moved
    from water to sugar
  • When water is split, electrons are transferred
    form the water to carbon dioxide, reducing it to
    sugar

7
The chloroplast
  • Photosynthesis occurs in chloroplasts
  • Chlorophyll (and other pigments), stored in
    thylakoid membranes captures light energy - this
    is where light dependent reactions occur
  • The stroma (matrix inside chloroplast) contains
    light-independent reactions, reducing CO2 to CH2O
  • Thylakoids and photosynthetic cells are organized
    in grana and the mesophyll respectively to
    maximize absorption of light

8
The light-dependent reaction
  • Light energy is converted to chemical bond energy
    found in ATP and NADPH, occurring in thylakoid
    membranes
  • NADP (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide
    phosphate) is reduced to NADPH, temporarily
    storing energized electrons transferred from
    water, and an H
  • O2 is a by-product of splitting water
  • ATP is produced via photophosphorylation
  • ATP and electrons are used in next stage to fix
    carbon

9
The light-independent reaction
  • Also known as the Calvin cycle
  • Main purpose is to fix carbon (process of
    incorporating carbon into organic molecules
  • NADPH provides the reducing power
  • ATP provides the chemical energy

10
How the light reaction works
  • The nature of light
  • Acts as both a particle and a waveform
  • As a wave, is a type of electromagnetic energy
    visible light consists of a spectrum of
    wavelengths from 380 nm to 750 nm
  • As a particle, light behaves as discrete
    particles called photons, each photon having a
    fixed amount of energy
  • In photosynthesis, the most used (absorbed)
    wavelengths are blue and red. Green is
    transmitted (hence the green color of chlorophyll)

11
  • A substance that absorbs light is called a
    pigment
  • Each pigment has a characteristic absorption
    spectrum
  • In the light reaction the most important pigment
    is chlorophyll a
  • However, the action spectrum for chlorophyll a
    does not match that for photosynthesis -
    therefore, other pigments are involved
  • Carotenoids, e.g., xanthophyll
  • Chlorophyll b
  • These accessory pigments do not participate
    directly in the light reaction, but work with
    chlorophyll a to do so

12
How pigments aid the light-dependent reaction
  • Photo-excitation
  • Absorbed wavelength photons boost one of the
    pigment molecules electrons in its lowest energy
    state (ground state) to an orbital of higher
    energy (excited state)
  • The difference in energy is directly equal to the
    energy of the photon, and therefore specific to a
    specific wavelength
  • Conclusion certain pigments are designed to
    absorb particular wavelengths

13
Photosystems
  • Photosystems are organizations of photosynthetic
    pigments, consisting of
  • An antenna complex (responsible for inductive
    resonance, the absorption of energy associated
    with photons, and passing that energy between
    themselves
  • A reaction centre chlorophyll. One molecule of
    chlorophyll a per photosystem can take that
    energy use it to push out an electron, passing it
    to
  • the primary electron acceptor (the first step of
    the light reaction
  • Two types of photosystem P700 (photosystem I)
    and P680 (photosystem II)

14
Non-cyclic electron flow
  • Excited electrons are transferred form P700 to
    the primary electron acceptor for photosystem I
  • Primary electron acceptor passes excited
    electrons to NADP (goes to NADPH) via ferredoxin
  • Oxidized P700 chlorophyll becomes an oxidizing
    agent (needs electrons to be replaced). These
    electrons come indirectly from photosystem II

15
  • Electrons ejected from P680 are trapped by the PS
    II primary electron acceptor
  • These electrons are transferred to an electron
    transport chain (making ATP), eventually ending
    in P700 (PS I)
  • Electron space vacated in P680 are filled
    splitting of water
  • H2O O 2H 2e-

Light enzyme
chemiosmosis
to P680
16
  • Production of ATP via the electron transport
    chain is termed photo-phosphorylation (light
    energy used to make ADP into ATP)
  • In this case, ATP production is specifically
    termed noncyclic photo-phosphorylation

17
Cyclic electron flow
  • Involves only PS I, P700
  • In this cyclic system, ejected electrons are fed
    to the ETC to generate ATP (cyclic
    photo-phosphorylation)
  • P700 acts as the ultimate acceptor of the shunted
    electrons
  • No NADPH is produced, or O2
  • Aim is to produce extra ATP needed for Calvin
    cycle

18
The Calvin cycle
  • Powered by ATP and NADPH from light-dependent
    reaction
  • Carbon enters cycle as CO2 and leaves as triose
    sugar, glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate (G3P)
  • Three phases
  • Carbon fixation - a molecule of CO2 is attached
    to a CO2-acceptor, ribulose biphosphate (RBP)
  • Unstable 6-carbon intermediate degrades into
    3-carbon molecule
  • Reduction - endergonic reaction
  • uses ATP (energy) and NADPH (reducing agent) to
    convert 3-phosphoglycerate to glyceraldehyde
    6-phosphate
  • Regeneration of RBP (requires ATP)
  • Calvin cycle needs 18 ATP and 12 NADPH to produce
    1 molecule of glucose

19
Alternative mechanisms
  • Photorespiration - a metabolic pathway that
    consumes O2, produces CO2, produces no ATP and
    decreases photosynthetic output
  • Occurs because Rubisco (enzyme in Calvin cycle),
    can accept O2 instead of CO2
  • When O2 conc. higher than CO2 conc. In leaf,
    rubisco takes O2 (e.g., when hot, stomata close,
    CO2 drops, O2 increases)

20
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21
Strategies to prevent photorespiration
  • C3 plants produce 3 phosphoglycerate, the first
    stable intermediate in the Calvin cycle (eg,
    rice, soy, wheat)
  • C4 plants (eg, corn, sugar, grasses) have
    different morphology. CO2 fixation occurs in
    different location
  • In mesophyll cells, CO2 is added to
    phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) to make oxaloacetate
    (4-carbons). Enzyme is PEP carboxylase, which has
    a far higher affinity for CO2 than O2
  • Oxaloacetate is converted to malate (4C), and
    then moved to bundle sheath cells, where
    remaining Calvin cycle occurs

22
Another strategy...
  • In succulents adapted to dry, arid environments,
    stomata closed during day
  • At night, stomata open and CO2 is incorporated
    into a number of organic acids (termed
    crassulacean acid metabolism CAM)
  • During day, light reactions produce ATP and NADPH
    which release CO2 from organic acids
  • In summary,
  • C4 plants spatially separate carbon fixation from
    the Calvin cycle
  • CAM plants temporally separate carbon fixation
    from the Calvin cycle
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