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Photosynthesis and Cellular Respiration Chapter 5
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5.1 Energy and Living Things Remember: Metabolism is either the energy used to build molecules or the release of energy by breaking down molecules
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Photosynthesis Turn light energy into chemical energy Autotrophs – make their own food Most are photosynthetic Some are chemosynthetic (get energy from inorganic compounds)
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Cellular Respiration Get energy from food Heterotrophs – must ingest energy Produces ATP
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Transfer of Energy to ATP Energy from food released gradually in a series of enzyme-assisted chemical reactions Product of 1 reaction becomes the reactant in the next reaction Some energy is released as heat Most energy is stored in ATP which can deliver it where it is needed
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How ATP Works (Yes, again) ATP = Adenosine Triphosphate 3 negative phosphates repel each other Energy released when bonds break Produces ADP = adenosine diphosphate
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Can be reversed back into ATP If a 2 nd phosphate is broken off = irreversible Water is used in breaking H 2 O + ATP = ADP + P + ENERGY
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Photosynthesis Stages of Photosynthesis First 2 are called Light Dependent Reactions Stage 1: Energy is captured from sunlight Stage 2: Light energy is changed to chemical energy Chemical energy stored temporarily in ATP and a carrier molecule called NADPH Stage 3 is called Light Independent or Dark Reactions Energy in ATP and NADPH powers the formation of organic compounds using CO 2
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Where does all of this take place? In the chloroplasts of plant cells and algae and in the cell membrane of certain prokaryotes 6CO 2 + 6H 2 O C 6 H 12 O 6 + 6O 2 Carbon dioxide and water make sugars and oxygen with the help of light energy Some sugars form starch and are stored in stems and roots These can be broken down later to make ATP Sugars break down and make proteins, nucleic acids, and others
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Stage 1 Absorption of Light Energy (Light Dependent) Light is a form of radiation Pigments are light absorbing substances But they only absorb certain wavelengths Chlorophyll is the primary pigment Absorbs mostly blue and red Reflects green and yellow which is why we see them as these colors
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A few different kinds Chlorophyll a Chlorophyll b Carotenoids Yellow and orange reflecting pigments Absorb different wavelengths than chlorophyll
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Stage 1: Oxygen Production Pigments in chloroplasts of leaf cells Found in part of chloroplast called Thylakoid which is a disk shaped structure Light hits thylakoid and energy is transferred to electrons in chlorophyll Electrons jump to higher energy and are considered “excited” Some electrons jump from chlorophyll to other nearby molecules in the thylakoid membrane where they power 2 nd stage
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Other electrons from H 2 O replace those that leave H 2 O is split by an enzyme in the thylakoid Chlorophyll takes e- from H leaving H+ The O left behind combines with others to form O 2
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Stage 2: Conversion of Light Energy e- that jump from thylakoid membrane This stage uses electron transport chains Chain 1 e- move through a protein Some energy lost as they power protein which pumps H+ into thylakoid H+ become concentrated in thylakoid (concentration gradient causes diffusion out) Carried by carrier protein, - ion channel, and enzyme As H+ passes through it catalyzes a reaction so ADP + P make ATP
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Chain 2 Makes NADPH which provides high energy electrons needed to form carbon-hydrogen bonds in stage 3 e- combine with H+ and NADP+ forming NADPH
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Summary of Light Dependent Reactions Light absorbed by pigments in thylakoid of chloroplast E- in pigments are excited and move through e- transport chains E- replaced by e- from water molecules split by an enzyme O in water forms O2 gas H+ accumulate inside thylakoids, concentration gradient occurs powering ATP production
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Stage 3: Storage of Energy (Light-Independent or Dark Reactions) Carbon atoms from CO 2 make organic compounds to store chemical energy This is called Carbon Dioxide Fixation Several ways this can be done
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Calvin Cycle is most common way Produces 3-carbon sugars Step 1 3 CO 2 needed Each CO 2 is added to a 5-carbon compound by an enzyme
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