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Making Sugar from CO2: The Calvin Benson Cycle. Metabolic Pathways in Plants ... The Calvin Benson cycle has three phases: fixation of CO2, reduction and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Life: the Science of Biology, Purves 6th ed.


1
Life the Science of Biology, Purves 6th ed.
CHAPTER 8Photosynthesis Energy from the Sun
2
Chapter 8 Photosynthesis Energy from the Sun
  • Photosynthesis
  • Identifying Photosynthetic Reactants and Products
  • The Two Pathways of Photosynthesis An Overview
  • Properties of Light and Pigments

3
Chapter 8 Photosynthesis Energy from the Sun
  • Light Reactions Light Absorption
  • Making Sugar from CO2 The CalvinBenson Cycle
  • Metabolic Pathways in Plants

4
Photosynthesis
  • Life on Earth depends on the absorption of light
    energy from the sun.

5
Photosynthesis
  • In plants, photosynthesis takes place in
    chloroplasts.

6
Identifying Photosynthetic Reactants and Products
  • Photosynthesizing plants take in CO2, water, and
    light energy, producing O2 and carbohydrate. The
    overall reaction is
  • 6 CO2 12 H2O light ? C6H12O6 6 O2 6 H2O
  • The oxygen atoms in O2 come from water, not from
    CO2. Review Figures 8.1, 8.2

7
Figure 8.1
figure 08-01.jpg
  • Figure 8.1

8
Figure 8.2
figure 08-02.jpg
  • Figure 8.2

9
The Two Pathways of Photosynthesis An Overview
  • In the light reactions of photosynthesis,
    electron flow and photophosphorylation produce
    ATP and reduce NADP to NADPH H. Review Figure
    8.3

10
Figure 8.3
figure 08-03.jpg
  • Figure 8.3

11
The Two Pathways of Photosynthesis An Overview
  • ATP and NADPH H are needed for the reactions
    that fix and reduce CO2 in the CalvinBenson
    cycle, forming sugars. Review Figure 8.3

12
Properties of Light and Pigments
  • Light energy comes in packets called photons, but
    it also has wavelike properties. Review Figure 8.4

13
Figure 8.4
figure 08-04.jpg
  • Figure 8.4

14
Properties of Light and Pigments
  • Pigments absorb light in the visible spectrum.
    Review Figure 8.5

15
Figure 8.5
figure 08-05.jpg
  • Figure 8.5

16
Properties of Light and Pigments
  • Absorption of a photon puts a pigment molecule in
    an excited state with more energy than its ground
    state. Review Figure 8.6

17
Figure 8.6
figure 08-06.jpg
  • Figure 8.6

18
Properties of Light and Pigments
  • Each compound has a characteristic absorption
    spectrum which reveals the biological
    effectiveness of different wavelengths of light.
    Review Figures 8.7, 8.8

19
Figure 8.7
figure 08-07.jpg
  • Figure 8.7

20
Figure 8.8
figure 08-08.jpg
  • Figure 8.8

21
Properties of Light and Pigments
  • Chlorophylls and accessory pigments form antenna
    systems for absorption of light energy. Review
    Figures 8.7, 8.9, 8.11

22
Figure 8.9
figure 08-09.jpg
  • Figure 8.9

23
Figure 8.11
figure 08-11.jpg
  • Figure 8.11

24
Light Reactions Light Absorption
  • An excited pigment molecule may lose its energy
    by fluorescence, or by transferring it to another
    pigment molecule. Review Figures 8.10, 8.11

25
Figure 8.10
figure 08-10.jpg
  • Figure 8.10

26
Electron Flow, Photophos-phorylation, and
Reductions
  • Noncyclic electron flow uses two photosystems
    Photosystem II uses P680 chlorophyll, from which
    light-excited electrons pass to a redox chain
    that drives chemiosmotic ATP production.
    Light-driven water oxidation releases O2, passing
    electrons to P680 chlorophyll. Photosystem I
    passes electrons from P700 chlorophyll to another
    redox chain and then to NADP, forming NADPH
    H. Review Figure 8.12

27
Figure 8.12 Part 1
figure 08-12a.jpg
  • Figure 8.12 Part 1

28
Figure 8.12 Part 2
figure 08-12b.jpg
  • Figure 8.12 Part 2

29
Electron Flow, Photophos-phorylation, and
Reductions
  • Cyclic electron flow uses P700 chlorophyll
    producing only ATP. Its operation maintains the
    proper balance of ATP and NADPH H in the
    chloroplast. Review Figure 8.13

30
Figure 8.13
figure 08-13.jpg
  • Figure 8.13

31
Electron Flow, Photophos-phorylation, and
Reductions
  • Chemiosmosis is the source of ATP in
    photophosphorylation. Electron transport pumps
    protons from stroma into thylakoids, establishing
    a proton-motive force. Proton diffusion to stroma
    via ATP synthase channels drives ATP formation
    from ADP and Pi. Review Figure 8.14

32
Figure 8.14
figure 08-14.jpg
  • Figure 8.14

33
Electron Flow, Photophos-phorylation, and
Reductions
  • Photosynthesis probably originated in anaerobic
    bacteria that used H2S as a source of electrons
    instead of H2O. Oxygen production by bacteria was
    important in eukaryote evolution.

34
Making Sugar from CO2 The CalvinBenson Cycle
  • The CalvinBenson cycle makes sugar from CO2.
    This pathway was elucidated through use of
    radioactive tracers. Review Figure 8.15

35
Figure 8.15
figure 08-15.jpg
  • Figure 8.15

36
Making Sugar from CO2 The CalvinBenson Cycle
  • The CalvinBenson cycle has three phases
    fixation of CO2, reduction and carbohydrate
    production, and regeneration of RuBP. RuBP is the
    initial CO2 acceptor, 3PG is the first stable
    product of CO2 fixation. Rubisco catalyzes the
    reaction of CO2 and RuBP to form 3PG. Review
    Figures 8.16, 8.17

37
Figure 8.16
figure 08-16.jpg
  • Figure 8.16

38
Figure 8.17
figure 08-17.jpg
  • Figure 8.17

39
Metabolic Pathways in Plants
  • Plants respire in light and darkness, but
    photosynthesize only in light. A plant must
    photosynthesize more than it respires, giving it
    a net gain of reduced energy-rich compounds.

40
Metabolic Pathways in Plants
  • Photosynthesis and respiration are linked through
    the CalvinBenson cycle, the citric acid cycle,
    and glycolysis. Review Figure 8.22

41
Figure 8.22 Part 1
figure 08-22a.jpg
  • Figure 8.22 Part 1

42
Figure 8.22 Part 2
figure 08-22b.jpg
  • Figure 8.22 Part 2
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