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Chapter 8 Cellular Energy
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8.1 How organisms obtain energy Main Idea: all living organisms use energy to carry out all biological processes
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Transformation of Energy You are using energy even when you don’t know it! How??? Energy = ability to do work
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1 st law of thermodynamics Conservation of energy: energy cannot be created or destroyed just converted from one form to another
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Autotrophs and heterotrophs Nearly all the energy for life comes from the sun Autotrophs – organisms that make their own food Chemoautotrophs – use inorganic substances as source of energy Heterotrophs – organisms that need to ingest food to obtain energy
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Metabolism All of the chemical reactions in a cell Metabolic pathway – series of reactions where products of one become reactants of another Catabolic – break stuff down, release energy Anabolic – put stuff together, absorb energy
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Photosynthesis Anabolic Light chemical energy 6CO 2 + 6H 2 O C 6 H 12 O 6 + 6O 2
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ATP In living things chemical energy is stored in biological molecules and can be converted to other forms of energy when needed Adenosine triphosphate = ATP: most important biological molecule that provides chemical energy Found in all types of organisms What if there was none?
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ATP structure Nucleotide Adenine base, ribose sugar, 3 phosphate groups
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ATP Function Lots of energy is stored in chemical bonds ATP releases energy when bond between 2 nd & 3 rd phosphate group is broken Left with ADP + free phosphate group
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Learning Goal Describe Photosynthesis as a chemical process
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8.2 Photosynthesis Main Idea: Light energy is trapped and converted into chemical energy during photosynthesis
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Overview of photosynthesis Done by most autotrophs 6CO 2 + 6H 2 O C 6 H 12 O 6 + 6O 2 Occurs in 2 phases Light reactions – light energy absorbed & converted into ATP and NADPH Dark reactions – energy from ATP & NADPH makes glucose
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a A look inside the leaf b One of the photosynthetic cells inside leaf leaf’s upper epidermis photosynthetic cell in leaf leaf vein leaf’s lower epidermis Leaf Structure 16
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Chloroplasts Site of photosynthesis in plant cells Capture light energy Found mainly in the cells of leaves Why?
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Important structures in Chloroplasts Thylakoids: Disk shaped membranes Contain photosynthetic pigments. Site of light dependent reactions. Grana: Stacks of thylakoids. Stroma: Fluid filled space surrounding grana. Site of light independent reactions. 18
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Properties of Light White light from the sun is composed of a range of wavelengths. 20
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Pigments Light absorbing colored molecules In thylakoid membranes Different pigments absorb specific wavelengths of light Major = chlorophylls Absorb in blue region & a little in red region Reflect in green region Why are most plants green?
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Why do leaves change color?
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Suppose a large meteor hit the earth. How could smoke and soot in the atmosphere wipe out life far beyond the area of direct impact?
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Photosynthesis Equation 6H 2 O + 6CO 2 6O 2 + C 6 H 12 O 6 watercarbon dioxide oxygenglucose LIGHT ENERGY 24
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Photosynthesis Two stages: light-dependent reactions require light to work (in thylakoids) light-independent reactions do not require light (but still happen during the day) (In stroma) 25
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sunlight Where the two stages of photosynthesis occur inside the chloroplast light- dependent reactions light- independent reactions CO 2 sugars NADPH, ATP NADP +, ADP O2O2 H2OH2O Two Steps in Photosynthesis 26
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Light Reactions In THYLAKOIDS Large surface area for ETC Membranes have photosystems in them Proteins that contain light absorbing pigments (chlorophyll) Electron transport chain
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Photosystem II – where it all begins Photosystem II – a protein in the membrane of the thylakoid that contains the pigment chlorophyll
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Light energy excites electrons in photosystem II
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Energy from excited electron is transferred to a chlorophyll molecule where it is used to excite chlorophyll’s electrons Chlorophyll molecule gives excited electron to primary electron acceptor Transfers electron to ETC
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Meanwhile… As electrons keep getting taken away from the chlorophyll molecule, the electrons must be replaced. The replacement electrons come from water. Water splitting equation
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When water is split oxygen is released as a waste product and H + (protons) are released into thylakoid space
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What happened to that electron? Primary electron acceptor transfers electron to photosystem I Another protein in thylakoid membrane Photosystem I absorbs light to re-energize electron then transfers electron to ferrodoxin (final electron acceptor)
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Ferrodoxin transfers electron to NADP + forming NADPH Energy storage molecule
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Light reactions summary ferrodoxin Photosystem I Primary electron acceptor Photosystem II
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1. Light energy excites electrons in photosystem II 1. Water splits releasing 1 electron, H + ion, & Oxygen 2. Electron travels to primary electron acceptor 3. Primary electron acceptor transfers electron to photosystem I 4. With light energy photosystem 1 transfers electron to protein (ferrodoxin) 5. Ferrodoxin transfers electron to NADP + forming NADPH 6. ETC ETC
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Chemiosmosis Produces ATP H + released during ETC accumulate inside the thylakoid H + diffuse into stroma through ion channels ATP synthases convert ADP to ATP ATP formed in stroma
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wJDl xp17rY4
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Products of light-dependent reactions O 2 (waste) NADPH (used in dark reactions) ATP (used in dark reactions)
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Light Independent Reactions What are the products of light reactions? Not stable enough to store energy for a long time Calvin cycle: ATP + NADPH + CO 2 Glucose Takes place in stroma
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1. Carbon fixation: Rubisco(enzyme) takes C atoms from CO 2 in air to create organic molecule 2. Organic molecule uses energy from ATP and NADPH to form G3P some of which then form glucose (C 6 H 12 O 6 ) 3. Remaining G3P use energy from ATP to regenerate the original organic molecule
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Summary Light reactions: Reactants Products Dark Reactions: Reactants Products
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Factors that Affect Rates 3 factors can limit the speed of photosynthesis: light intensity, CO 2 concentration, temperature Without enough light, a plant cannot photosynthesize very quickly, even if there is plenty of water and CO 2. 47
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48 Sometimes photosynthesis is limited by the concentration of carbon dioxide in the air. Even if there is plenty of light, a plant cannot photosynthesize if there is insufficient carbon dioxide.
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If it gets too cold, the rate of photosynthesis will decrease. Plants cannot photosynthesize if it gets too hot. 49
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How does CO 2 enter plant?
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Stomata Primary sites for gas exchange in plants CO 2 enters for photosynthesis O 2 exits water vapor evaporates Closed stomata: prevents water evaporation O 2 cannot be released from the chloroplasts CO 2 cannot enter them No carbon = no Calvin cycle plant growth comes to a standstill; crops fail 52
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Alternative pathways Plants in extreme climates have alternative photosynthesis pathways to maximize energy conversion because stomata are closed during the day to prevent water loss
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C4 Sugarcane, corn Fix CO 2 into 4-carbon compounds instead of 3-Carbon compounds photosynthesizes faster than C3 plants under high light intensity and high temperatures better water use efficiency because PEP Carboxylase brings in CO 2 faster doesn’t need to keep stomata open as much
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CAM Plants that live in deserts, salt marshes, other places water is limited Cacti, orchids, pineapple Stomata closed during the day CO 2 enters leaves only at night Calvin cycle only occurs during the day
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