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Published byKelley Casey Modified over 9 years ago
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Catalyst Could humans survive without plants? Why, if at all, are plants important?
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Cell Parts: Chloroplast Photosynthesis: occurs only in plants (not animals!) 6CO 2 + 6H 2 O + light C 6 H 12 O 6 + 6O 2 (glucose sugar) (oxygen) (carbon dioxide)(water) (energy) stored in plant; for plant use or animal use with cellular respiration released from leaves absorb through leaves from roots from sun Image Source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/11/Chloroplast-new.jpg
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Chloroplast: capture light energy; make food energy
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Cell Parts: Chloroplast Image Source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/11/Chloroplast-new.jpg Thylakoid: flattened discs containing chlorophyll Granum (pl. Grana): stack of thylakoids Stroma: fluid inside chloroplast (similar to a cell’s cytoplasm) Lamella: links thylakoids in grana together Lumen: inside of the thylakoid
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Cell Parts: Chloroplast Chlorophyll: pigment in chloroplasts that absorbs light Review: Visible Light Spectrum Violet IndigoBlueGreenOrangeRedYellow “VIB G YOR” (or “ROY G BIV”)
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Cell Parts: Chloroplast The color you see is the color that is reflected Chlorophyll reflects green; absorbs ROYBIV! R O Y G B I V Reflects: Absorbs: We See: RED OTHER COLORS RED Light energy the plant uses!!!!
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Cell Parts: Chloroplast Phase I: Light-Dependent Reactions Phase 2: Light-Independent Reactions / Calvin Cycle Image Source: bioweb.uwlax.edu
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Cell Parts: Chloroplast Phase 1: Light-Dependent Reactions Occurs at thylakoid membrane (Lumen Stroma) Requires light (dependent)
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Cell Parts: Chloroplast Phase I: Light-Dependent Reactions
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Cell Parts: Chloroplast Phase 1: Light-Dependent Reactions Mini-Steps: 1. Photosystem II absorbs light energy to spilt water into: oxygen, H + s in lumen, & activated e - that enters the ETC. 2. Electron Transport Chain – e - s move through membrane to pump H + s into lumen. 3. Photosystem I absorbs light energy and re- energizes e -, which moves to ferrodoxin (protein) to form NADPH. 4. H + s accumulate in lumen to create a gradient (high [H + ] in lumen, low [H + ] in stroma). 5. ATP Synthesis – As H + s move across thylakoid membrane through ATP Synthase, ADP is converted into ATP. Chemiosmosis
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Cell Parts: Chloroplast Phase 2: Calvin Cycle / Light-Independent Reactions In stroma Doesn’t directly require light energy (independent) ATP & NADPH = energy, but not stable converted to glucose sugar.
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Cell Parts: Chloroplast Phase 2: Calvin Cycle 12 3-PGA CCC 12 G3P CCC Rubisco CO 2 6 ribulose 5-phosphate CCCCC ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate6 CCCCC 2 G3P CCC Transported from chloroplast to make glucose, fructose, starch, etc. (carbohydrates / sugars) 12 ATP 12 ADP 12 NADPH 12 NADP + 6 ATP 6 6 ADP Calvin Cycle (3-phosphoglyceric acid) (glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate)
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Cell Parts: Chloroplast Phase 2: Calvin Cycle Mini-Steps: 1. Carbon Fixation: Carbon dioxide joins a five-carbon molecule to make twice as many three-carbon molecules. 2. ATP & NADPH turn 3-PGA into G3P (a high energy molecule). ATP supplies phosphate groups; NADPH supplies H + s and e - s. 3. Two G3P molecules leave to make glucose & other carbohydrates. 4. Rubisco (enzyme/protein) converts remaining ten G3P molecules into five-carbon molecules to be used in carbon fixation. 12 3-PGA CCC 12 G3P CCC Rubisco CO 2 6 ribulose 5-phosphate CCCCC ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate6 CCCCC 2 G3P CCC 12 ATP 12 ADP 12 NADPH 12 NADP + 6 ATP 6 6 ADP Calvin Cycle (3-phosphoglyceric acid) (glyceraldehyde 3- phosphate)
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Cell Parts: Chloroplast Phase I: Light-Dependent Reactions Photosystem II uses light to split water: H + s, oxygen, & e -. ETC: e - pumps H + s into lumen. Photosystem I re-energizes e- with light: forms NADPH. H+s in lumen create a concentration gradient. H+s move across thylakoid membrane through ATP Synthase: converts ADP into ATP Phase 2: Light-Independent Reactions / Calvin Cycle CO 2 molecules join with 5-carbon molecules to make 3-PGA molecules. NADPH and ATP from Light-Dependent Reactions turn 3-PGA into G3P. Two G3P molecules leave the Calvin Cycle to form glucose & other carbohydrates. Remaining G3P molecules converted by Rubisco into 5-carbon molecules that restart the cycle. Image Source: bioweb.uwlax.edu
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