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Published byErik Long Modified over 9 years ago
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Chapter 10 Photosynthesis
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Modes of Nutrition Heterotrophs – obtain organic compounds by consuming other organisms (animals) Photoautotrophs – build organic compounds with light energy (plants) Chemoautotrophs – use inorganic substances (sulfur, ammonia) as an energy source to make organic compounds (some bacteria)
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Photosynthesis NET: But really.. Opposite of Cellular Respiration!
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Photosynthetic prokaryotes do not have chloroplasts. Chlorophyll is in their plasma membrane. Contains chlorophyll
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Light Dependent: Closer Look Sunlight is electromagnetic energy – Wave-like properties and Particle-like properties – Waves Wavelengths – Visible wavelengths = 380nm-750nm Pigments: Substances that absorb visible light Chlorophyll a is main pigment Accessory Pigments: -Chlorophyll b (yellow-green -Carotenoids (oranges, yellows) So, why do leaves look green?
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Lab #4 – Plant Pigments
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What wavelengths are absorbed Effectiveness of wavelengths = activity Doesn’t exactly match due to accessory pigments (transfer energy to Chlor. a)
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Light Dependent: Photosystems Light harvesting units of the thylakoid membrane Composed mainly of protein and pigment antenna complexes Antenna pigment molecules are struck by photons Energy is passed to reaction centers Excited e- from chlorophyll is trapped by a primary e- acceptor
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Light Dependent: Photosystems 2 photosystems in thylakoid membrane – Photosystem II chlorophyll a P 680 = absorbs 680nm ~ red light – Photosystem I chlorophyll b P 700 = absorbs 700nm ~ red light
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Light Dependent = The ETC ETC uses light energy to produce – ATP & NADPH go to Calvin cycle PS II absorbs light – excited electron passes from chlorophyll to “primary electron acceptor” – need to replace electron in chlorophyll – enzyme extracts electrons from H 2 O & supplies them to chlorophyll splits H 2 O O combines with another O to form O 2 O 2 released to atmosphere and we breathe easier!
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Fill in Stroma (fluid) Thylakoid (disk)
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Lab #4 - Photosynthesis DPIP was used to replace NADP+ DPIP accepted e- (reduced = RIG) Turned from Blue Clear More light could pass through cuvette Transmittance % increased
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Light Dependent: Photophosphorylation Using light energy to add a P to ADP Two types: – Non-Cyclic – Cyclic
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Non-Cyclic Photophosphorylation Light reactions elevate electrons in 2 steps (PS II & PS I) – PS II generates energy as ATP – PS I generates reducing power as NADPH – NADPH used in Calvin Cycle (light independent)
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Cyclic Photophosphorylation Involves only PS1 Generates ATP but no NADPH or O 2 Supplements the ATP supply required for the Calvin Cycle
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Light Independent: A Closer Look AKA The Calvin Cycle In stroma Uses ATP and NADPH to convert CO 2 to sugar Makes a 3-C sugar Needs 3 CO 2 to make 1 Glucose (C 6 H 12 O 6 ) Uses 18 ATP (endergonic) and 12 NADPH to make 1 Glucose
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G3P Glyceraldehyde-3-P – end product of Calvin cycle – energy rich 3 carbon sugar “C3 photosynthesis” G3P is an important intermediate G3P glucose carbohydrates lipids phospholipids, fats, waxes amino acids proteins nucleic acids DNA, RNA
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RuBisCo Enzyme which fixes carbon from air – ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase – CO 2 + 5-C sugar (RuBP) is broken down by RuBisCo into 3-C sugars – most abundant enzyme
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Types of Plants C3 - most plants, produce G3P – Ex: rice, wheat, soybeans – Occurs in a single chloroplast – CO 2 + RuBp (5-C) = 6-C split into G3Ps Glucose
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Ruh-Roh… Hot, dry days – Stomata close to conserve water – CO 2 is depleted – O 2 builds up from light reactions RuBisCo – when O 2 concentration is high RuBisCo bonds O to RuBP O 2 is a competitive substrate oxidation of RuBP breakdown sugars CALLED PHOTORESPIRATION !
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Photorespiration Consumes oxygen Makes carbon dioxide Produces no ATP Decreases photosynthetic output (decreases organic molecules used in Calvin Cycle)
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SOLUTIONS! Plants living in hot, arid climates have evolved different modes of carbon fixation – C4 and CAM plants
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C4 – turn CO 2 into a 4-C compound – Ex: corn, sugarcane – Favored in hot, arid environments – 2 chloroplasts – Mesophyll = CO 2 is fixed into a 4-C – Bundle Sheath Cells (cells surrounding veins) = Calvin Cycle – Facilitates production of CO 2 to combat photorespiration FYI: the PEP Carboxylase has a much greater affinity for CO 2 than RuBisCo at higher temps
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CAM Plants – Ex: Cacti, Pineapple – Very arid environments – At night: Stomata open, take in CO 2 – Store a 4-C compound in vacuole – During Day: Light Rxns supply ATP and NADPH, Uses stored CO 2 to complete Calvin Cycle
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Photosynthesis Summary Light reactions – produced ATP – produced NADPH – consumed H 2 O – produced O 2 as byproduct Calvin cycle – consumed CO 2 – produced G3P (sugar) – regenerated ADP – regenerated NADP
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Interdependence in Nature
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REDOX rxns Cell Respiration Exergonic – Energy is RELEASED from the oxidation of sugar Electrons are transported to OXYGEN = Water – Oxygen pulls e - s down to produce concentration gradient of H + – H + is pumped through ATP Synthase ADP + Pi = ATP Photosynthesis Endergonic – Energy is REQUIRED – Light is the energy source that moves e - Water is split, electrons are moved from water to carbon dioxide – CO 2 is reduced – Makes sugar (glucose)
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Photosynthesis Animation http://dendro.cnre.vt.edu/forestbiology /photosynthesis.swf
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