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PHOTOSYNTHESIS, RESPIRATION, AND TRANSLOCATION
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http://www.emc.maricopa.edu/faculty/far abee/BIOBK/BioBookPS.html http://www.emc.maricopa.edu/faculty/far abee/BIOBK/BioBookPS.html
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PHOTOSYNTHESIS Green plants convert radiant energy into chemical energy - utilizes chlorophyll of the chloroplasts
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Molecular model of chlorophyll
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PHOTOSYNTHESIS Principal Photosynthetic Process: Hydrogen + Carbon Dioxide → CH 2 O in presence of: Photosynthetically Active Radiation - PAR
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Compensation Points Light: as PAR increases... photosynthetic CO 2 fixed equals respiration CO 2 released no net CO 2 movement until more PAR up to the Light Saturation Level
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Compensation Points CO 2 : CO 2 fixed by photosynthesis equals CO 2 released by respiration no net CO 2 movement
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Note: PAR level required for light saturation rises with increasing CO 2 Also: as PAR level increases, higher concentrations of CO 2 are required important differences in C 3 and C 4 plants
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Chemical equation for photosynthesis (greatly simplified): 6 CO 2 + 6 H 2 O + radiant energy w/ chlorophyll Yields: 6O 2 + C 6 H 12 O 6 (Glucose)
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GLUCOSE ENERGY 1 mole Glucose (a 6-carbon sugar (C6)), has energy equal to ~ 686 kcals Written as: 686 kcal/mol
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Light and Dark Reactions Two reactions in photosynthesis: Light Reactions - occur only in presence of light Dark Reactions - don’t require light; occur in light or complete darkness
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Light reactions involve: photons electrons of the chlorophyll molecule water molecule NADP (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate)
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Visible Light
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Light Reaction Process: 1) photons (light packets) energize electrons in chlorophyll molecule (z scheme) 2) energized chlorophyll splits water molecule 3) NADP captures H+ ion; holds it as NADP-H 4) ATP (adenosine triphosphate) formed by: a. light energy changed to chemical energy (NADPH) b. electron from H 2 O; energy released forms ATP Note: free O 2 is released in process
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Structure of ATP
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Dark Reactions (Calvin Cycle) Utilize: NADPH ATP CO 2 CO 2 combines w/ C 5 sugar Ribulose Diphosphate (RuDP) (catalyzed by RuDP-carboxylase, an enzyme)
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Dark Reactions (Calvin Cycle) u n s t a b l e - immediately splits into two PGA molecules (Phosphoglyceric acid) Plants forming these PGA molecules are: C 3 Plants
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Dark Reactions (Calvin Cycle) - H from NADPH transferred to PGA via ATP/NADPH energy - Phosphoglyceraldehyde (PGAL) is formed (a simple sugar) - PGAL combines into Glucose; however most PGAL is used to regenerate RuDP Special enzymes (RuDP-carboxylase) catalyze RuDP to combine with CO 2
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Dark Reactions (Calvin Cycle) Takes: 18 molecules ATP + 12NADPH + 6CO 2 = C 6 H 12 O 6 also yields 6H 2 O, 18ADP, and 18P
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Modified photosynthetic equation: 6CO 2 + 12H 2 O + radiant energy w/ chlorophyll → 6O 2 + 6H 2 O + C 6 H 12 O 6 shows that O 2 liberated in light reactions comes from H 2 O not CO 2 and that there are newly formed H 2 O molecules
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C 3 and C 4 Plants Photosynthetic pathways are complicated Simply stated: C 3 plants are less efficient at photosynthesis Reduced efficiency due to an “energy robber”: Photorespiration
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Occurs when C 3 plants oxygenase instead of carboxylase in the dark reaction; thus refer to enzyme as Rubisco for short Less efficient - can’t metabolize glycolate (C 2 ) produced; only passes one PGA to be reduced to PGAL Two carbon atoms are “lost” from cycle
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C 4 Plants C 4 plants designed to: reduce O 2 concentrations increase CO 2 concentrations favor carboxylase reaction
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C 4 Plants C 4 advantages: photosynthesize at lower CO 2 concentrations higher temperature optimums higher light saturation points rapid photosynthate movement
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Rate of Photosynthesis
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C 4 Plants Examples of C 4 plants: Corn* Sugarcane Sorghum Bermudagrass Sudangrass Note: C 4 weeds also - crabgrass, johnsongrass, shattercane, pigweed
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C 3 Plants Examples of C 3 plants: Wheat Rice Soybeans Alfalfa Fescue Barley
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CAM Plants CAM Plants - separate light and dark reactions according to: Time of Day CAM (Crassulacean Acid Metabolism) Plants include: Pineapple, Cacti, other succulents
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CAM Plants Light reactions occur during daytime but Initial fixation of CO 2 occurs at night Allows stomata to remain closed during the day - conserve H 2 O
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CAM Plants Also: 4-carbon Malic Acid “pool” accumulates overnight (lowers pH) During day stomata are closed Malic Acid releases CO 2 providing carbon source for dark reaction
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CAM Plants
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Environmental Factors Affecting Photosynthesis Light:intensity, quality, duration intensity – (see table 7-1; fig 7-7 p. 127) - etiolated vs. high light intensity - compensation point - saturation point quality - reds and blues; greens are reflected (fig. 7-6) duration - longer days = more photosynthesis
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Light Spectrum
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Light Quality - Chlorophyll
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Light Quality - Photosynthesis
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Environmental Factors Affecting Photosynthesis CO 2 : photosynthetic rate limited by small amounts of CO 2 increase by air movement; also CO 2 generators (greenhouse) Normal CO 2 content: 300 - 350 ppm (0.030 - 0.035 %)
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Environmental Factors Affecting Photosynthesis CO 2 (cont) (see fig. 7-8) Recall CO 2 compensation point: CO 2 evolved in respiration = CO 2 consumed in photosynthesis
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Environmental Factors Affecting Photosynthesis Temperature (Heat) 2x Photosynthetic Activity for each 10°C (18°F) increase in temperature Excess temp can lower photosynthesis and increase respiration
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Environmental Factors Affecting Photosynthesis H 2 O content: wilted leaves - rate near zero due to reduced CO 2 by closed stomata water does not directly limit photosynthesis (only ~ 0.01 % of water absorbed by plants is used as H source)
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Environmental Factors Affecting Photosynthesis but indirectly: low turgor - stomatal closing reduced leaf exposure enzymes affected excess soil moisture – anaerobic Lack of O 2 reduces respiration, uptake, etc.
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RESPIRATION Release of energy stored in foods Controlled burning or “oxidation” at low temps by enzymes Respiration equation: C 6 H 12 O 6 + 6O 2 → 6CO 2 + 6H 2 O + energy (glucose) (oxygen)(carbon dioxide) (water)
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RESPIRATION Modified Respiration Equation: Shows that H 2 O is an input as well as a product Specifies total net energy derived from one glucose molecule
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Modified Respiration Equation: C 6 H 12 O 6 + 6O 2 + 6H 2 O→6CO 2 + 12H 2 O + 38ATP + heat
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RESPIRATION Heat energy is of little value to plant (may be detrimental) ATP energy used for: Chemical reactions (energy req.) Assimilation (protoplasm) Maintenance (protoplasm) Synthesis (misc.) Accumulation (solutes) Conduction (foods) Motion (protoplasm, chromosomes)
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Gas Exchange in Respiration Gas exchange is the opposite of photosynthesis Respiration takes in O 2 and releases CO 2 liberates more O 2 than needed for respiration requires more CO 2 than released by respiration
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Gas Exchange in Respiration @ Compensation point (low light intensity): O 2 released in photosynthesis = CO 2 released in respiration
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COMPARISON OF PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND RESPIRATION Under ideal photosynthetic conditions: Photosynthetic Rate ~ 10x Respiration Rate
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COMPARISON OF PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND RESPIRATION Photosynthesis Cells w/chlorophyll In light Uses H 2 0 and CO 2 Releases O 2 Radiant energy to chemical energy Dry weight increases Food and energy produced Energy stored Respiration All living cells Light and dark Uses O 2 Forms CO 2 and H 2 0 Chemical energy to useful energy Dry weight decreases Food broken down Energy released
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Factors Affecting Respiration Temperature - respiration increases as temperature increases Moisture - respiration increases as moisture decreases (stress) Injuries - respiration increases with injury Age of tissue - respiration greater in young tissue Kind of tissue - respiration greater in meristematic CO 2 /O 2 - respiration increases with high O 2 / low CO 2 Stored carbohydrates - respiration increases with increased stored energy
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Respiration Problems/Hazards deterioration (fungi and bacteria) rot and decay loss of dry wt. loss of palatability high temperatures / high CO 2 (diseases; FIRE hazard)
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ENERGY TRANSFER Glycolysis - sugar splitting Net production of: 2 ATP molecules 2 NADH molecules Forms: pyruvic acid
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Aerobic Energy Transfer If O 2 and mitochondria are present: Krebs cycle - an energy converter converts glucose energy into usable energy via enzymes occurs in stroma of mitochondria “powerhouse”
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Mitochondria Cristae
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Electron Transport *must have O 2 present convert high energy from Krebs (NADH, FADH) into usable ATP occurs along cristae fingerlike projections in mitochondria where: cytochromes in enzymes transport electrons lowers and releases energy last cytochrome passes electrons to O 2 associates with 2 H+ protons forming H 2 O
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ALTERNATE ENERGY TRANSFER If no O 2 and mitochondria present to respire alternative is: fermentation - e.g. fig. 7-14, p. 135 yeast (fungi) in beer, bread silage
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