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Photosynthesis

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Photosynthesis & Cellular Respiration Chapter 5 Section 1 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Photosynthesis


1
Photosynthesis Cellular Respiration
  • Chapter 5 Section 1

2
Objectives
  • Analyze the flow of energy through living
    systems.
  • Compare the metabolism of autotrophs with that of
    heterotrophs.
  • Describe the role of ATP in metabolim.
  • Describe how energy is released from ATP.

3
Key Terms
  • Photosynthesis
  • Autotroph
  • Heterotroph
  • Cellular Respiration

4
Capturing the Energy of Life
  • All organisms require energy
  • Some organisms obtain energy directly from the
    sun
  • This energy is used to make organic compounds
    that will serve as food for the organisms

5
Autotrophs
  • Organisms that use energy from the sunlight or
    form chemical bonds in inorganic substances to
    make organic compounds.
  • Only 10 of the Earths 40 million species are
    autotrophs.
  • Includes plants and some other types of
    organisms.
  • Also known as producers.

6
Heterotrophs
  • Organisms that must get energy from food instead
    of directly from sunlight or inorganic
    substances.
  • Includes animals, humans even mushrooms.
  • Also known as consumers

7
Flow of Energy
8
Photosynthesis
  • Process in which plants use the energy of
    sunlight to convert water carbon dioxide into
    high-energy carbohydrates (sugars starches) and
    oxygen (waste product)

9
Cellular Respiration
  • Process by which cells produce energy from
    carbohydrates to do chemical work in the cell.

10
ATP
  • Principal chemical compounds that cells use to
    store and release energy. The only source of
    energy to do chemical work in the cell.

11
Storing Energy
  • ADP (adenosine diphosphate) is a compound that
    looks almost like ATP.
  • When a cell has energy available, it can store
    small amounts of it by adding a phosphate group
    to ADP molecules.

12
Releasing Energy for Chemical Work
  • Energy is released by breaking the bond between
    the 2nd and 3rd phosphate.

Mitochondria
ATP Enzymes ADP P Energy
13
PHOTOSYNTHESIS
14
Objectives
  • Summarize how energy is captured from sunlight in
    the first stage of photosynthesis.
  • Analyze the function of electron transport chains
    in the second stage of photosynthesis.
  • Relate the Calvin cycle to carbon dioxide
    fixation in the third stage of photosynthesis.
  • Identify three environmental factors that affect
    the rate of photosynthesis.

15
Key Terms
  • Pigment
  • Chlorophyll
  • Carotenoid
  • Thylakoid
  • Electron Transport Chain
  • NADPH
  • Carbon Dioxide Fixation
  • Calvin Cycle

16
Photosynthesis
  • Carbon dioxide (CO2) requiring process that uses
    light energy (photons) and water (H2O) to produce
    organic macromolecules (glucose).
  • 6CO2 6H2O ? C6H12O6 6O2

17
Where does Photosynthesis occur?
  • Plants/Autotrophs produce their own food
    (glucose)
  • Process called photosynthesis
  • Mainly occurs in the leaves
  • a. stoma - pores
  • b. mesophyll cells

18
The Stages of Photosynthesis
  • Stage 1
  • Energy is captured from sunlight by chlorophyll
    and other pigments present.
  • Stage 2
  • Light energy is converted to chemical energy,
    which is temporarily stored in ATP the energy
    carrier molecule NADPH
  • Stage 3
  • The chemical energy stored in ATP NADPH powers
    the formation of organic compounds, using the CO2
    to make Glucose.

19
Stages of Photosynthesis
20
The Photosynthesis Equation
Light
6CO2 6H20 C6H12O6 6O2
Carbon Dioxide
Water
Sugars
Oxygen
(High Energy)
21
Stage 1 Absorption of Light Energy
  • How does a human eye or leaf absorb light?

22
Visible Spectrum
  • Sunlight contains a mixture of all the
    wavelengths (colors) of visible light.
  • When sunlight passes through a prism, the prism
    separates the light into different colors.

23
Visible Spectrum
  • When light strikes an object, it is, absorbed,
    transmitted or reflected.
  • When all colors are absorbed the object appears
    black.
  • When all colors are reflected the object appears
    white.
  • If only one color is reflected the object appears
    that color.

24
Pigments
  • Light-absorbing substances
  • Absorb only certain wavelengths and reflect all
    others.

25
Chlorophyll
  • The primary pigment in plants.
  • Absorbs mostly blue red light
  • Reflects green yellow light
  • 2 Types of chlorophyll
  • Chlorophyll a - blue green
  • Chlorophyll b -yellow green

26
Carotenoids
  • Accessory pigments
  • -Carotenoids - orange
  • -Xanthrpphyll yellow
  • -Anthocyanin red
  • -Lutein grey/brown
  • Absorb wavelengths of light different from those
    absorbed by chlorophyll a b.

27
Light Absorption During Photosynthesis
28
Thylakoids
  • Saclike photosynthetic membranes located inside
    the chloroplasts.
  • Arranged in stacks known as grana (singular
    granum).

29
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30
Thylakoids
  • When light strikes a thylakoid in a chloroplast,
    energy is transferred to electrons in
    chlorophyll, exciting the chlorophyll.
  • This energy transfer causes electrons to jump to
    a higher energy level.
  • Electrons with extra energy are said to be
    excited

31
Excited Electrons
  • Excited electrons jump from chlorophyll molecules
    to other nearby molecules in the thylakoid
    membrane.
  • These electrons must be replaced by other
    electrons.
  • Plants get these replacement electrons from water
    molecules.

32
Replacement Electrons
  • Water molecules are split by an enzyme inside the
    thylakoid.
  • Chlorophyll molecules take the electrons from the
    hydrogen atoms.
  • Oxygen from the disassembled water molecules
    combine to form oxygen gas and this is given off
    at the end of stage 1 as a waste product of
    photosynthesis.

33
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34
Stage 2 Conversion of Light Energy
  • Light Dependent

35
Conversion of Light Energy
  • Excited electrons that leave chlorophyll
    molecules are used to produce new molecules,
    including ATP, that temporarily store chemical
    energy.

36
Electron Transport Chains
  • Excited electrons are passed through a series of
    molecules along the thylakoid membrane.
  • This is called the electron transport chain.
  • This provides the energy needed to make ATP.

37
NADPH
  • A second electron transport chain provides energy
    used to make NADPH
  • NADPH is an electron carrier that provides the
    high-energy electrons needed to make
    carbon-hydrogen bonds in the 3rd stage of
    photosynthesis

38
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39
Light-Dependent Reactions Summarized
  1. Pigment molecules in the thylakoids of
    chloroplasts absorb light energy.
  2. Electrons in the pigments are excited by light
    move through electron transport chains in
    thylakoid membranes.
  3. These electrons are replaced by electrons from
    water molecules that are split.

40
Light-Dependent Reactions Summarized (cont)
  1. Oxygen atoms from water molecules combine to form
    oxygen gas.
  2. Hydrogen ions accumulate inside thylakoids,
    setting up a concentration gradient that provides
    the energy to make ATP and molecules of NADPH to
    be used in the Dark Reaction, the third stage.

41
Stage 3 Storage of Energy
  • Dark Reaction

42
Dark Reaction (third stage) of Photosynthesis
  • Carbon atoms from carbon dioxide in the
    atmosphere and the H molecules from the NADPH of
    the light reactions are used to make organic
    compounds in which chemical energy is stored in
    glucose molecules.
  • The transfer of carbon dioxide to organic
    compounds (glucose) is called carbon dioxide
    fixation or the Calvin Cycle.

43
Calvin Cycle
  • Most common method of carbon dioxide fixation.
  • Series of enzyme-assisted chemical reactions that
    produce a three-carbon sugar.

44
Dark Reaction Summarized
  1. Each molecule of carbon dioxide is added to a
    five-carbon compound by an enzyme using the
    energy from the ATP and the splitting of the
    NADPH from the Light Reaction.
  2. The resulting six-carbon compound splits into two
    three-carbon compounds. Phosphate groups from
    ATP electrons from NADPH are added to the
    three-carbon compounds, forming three-carbon
    sugars.

45
Calvin Cycle Summarized (cont)
  1. The resulting three-carbon sugars are used to
    make organic compounds glucose in which energy
    is stored for later use by the organism.

46
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47
Factors that Affect Photosynthesis
  • Light
  • Rate increases as light intensity increases until
    all the pigments are being used.
  • Concentration of carbon dioxide
  • Once a certain concentration of carbon dioxide is
    present, photosynthesis cannot proceed faster
  • Temperature
  • Most efficient within a certain range of
    temperatures.

48
Question
  • During the fall, what causes the leaves to change
    colors?

49
Fall Colors
  • In addition to the chlorophyll pigments, there
    are other pigments present
  • During the fall, the green chlorophyll pigments
    are greatly reduced revealing the other pigments
  • Carotenoids are pigments that are either red,
    orange, or yellow

50
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