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Published byJeremy Jackson Modified over 9 years ago
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Photosynthesis Overview Only 5% of the light that hits earth's surface is converted to organic compounds by photosynthesis. 6 CO 2 (g) + 6 H 2 O(I) + light energy C 6 H 12 O 6 (aq) + 6 O 2 (g)
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Light Light travels in wave packets called photons Light from the sun is a mixture of photons of different energies (called wavelengths, measured in nanometers). Photons are captured in plants by plastids.
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Chloroplasts Photosynthesis factories for plants and algae Store excess glucose as starch. Structure: 2 membranes (like mitochondria) Interior space filled with stroma (protein-rich fluid) In the stroma are thylakoids (membrane bound sacs)
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Thylakoids Grana: stack of thylakoids (~60 grana per chloroplast with 30-50 thylakoids each) Lamellae: unstacked thylakoids that link grana together. Lumen: interior of the thylakoid, water- filled The thylakoid membrane contains light gathering (photosynthetic) pigments
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Pigments Green plants contain chlorophyll a and b both absorb blue and red light and reflect green light So we assume blue and red light is used in photosynthesis Chloropyhll a is used to transfer energy from light into chemical energy. Chlorophyll b is an accessory pigment. It absorbs photons that a misses.
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Accessory Pigments In addition to chlorophyll b there are other accessory pigments. Their job is to absorb light that can damage chlorophyll and lose it as heat instead. Carotenoids: appear yellow/orange (ie. Carrots). Betacarotene protects our eyes Xanthophylls: reflect yellow light, also found in the thylakoid
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Photosystems Photosynthetic pigments are embedded in the thylakoid membrane clustered in groups called photosystems. A photosystem contains a chlorophyll a molecule called a reaction centre, surrounded by accessory pigments called the antenna complex. The antenna complex harvests the light and passes it to the reaction centre.
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P I (P700) and P II (P680) Two types of photosystems exist, Photosystem I (PI) and PII. They have identical reaction centres, but they are associated with different protein molecules. As a result they absorb light at slightly different wavelengths. The reaction center in PI is called P700; absorption peaks at 700nm PII reaction centre is P680, absorption peaks at 680nm
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