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Where It Starts – Photosynthesis Lecture 8 - Autumn 2007
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Sunlight as an Energy Source Photosynthesis runs on a fraction of the electromagnetic spectrum, or the full range of energy radiating from the sun
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Visible Light Wavelengths humans perceive as different colors Violet (380 nm) to red (750 nm) Longer wavelengths, lower energy
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Electromagnetic Spectrum Shortest Gamma rays wavelength X-rays UV radiation Visible light Infrared radiation Microwaves LongestRadio waves wavelength
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Photons Packets of light energy Each type of photon has fixed amount of energy Photons having most energy travel as shortest wavelength ( deep blue sea - blue light travels the deepest because it has the most energy )
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Pigments Light-absorbing molecules Absorb some wavelengths and transmit others Color you see are the wavelengths not absorbed
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Variety of Pigments Chlorophylls a and b Carotenoids Etc.
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Chlorophylls Main pigments in most photoautotrophs - Organisms which make their own food Wavelength absorption (%) Wavelength (nanometers) chlorophyll b chlorophyll a
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Carotenoids Found in all photoautotrophs Absorb blue-violet and blue-green that chlorophylls miss Reflect red, yellow, orange wavelengths Two types –Carotenes - pure hydrocarbons –Xanthophylls - contain oxygen
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Xanthophylls Yellow, brown, purple, or blue accessory pigments
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Phycobilins & Anthocyanins Red to purple pigments Phycobilins –Found in red algae and cyanobacteria Anthocyanins –Give many flowers their colors
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T.E. Englemann’s Experiment - simple elegance - illuminate a long strand of photosynthetic algae with a spectrum of light, and watch were the mobile bacteria accumulate!
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1.Pigments absorb light energy, give up e - which enter electron transfer chains 2.Water molecules are split, ATP and NADH are formed, and oxygen is released (waste product - lucky for us!) 3.Pigments that gave up electrons get replacements Light-Dependent Reactions
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Synthesis part of photosynthesis Can proceed in the dark Take place in the stroma (special structures inside the chloroplast) Calvin-Benson cycle Synthesis part of photosynthesis Can proceed in the dark Take place in the stroma (special structures inside the chloroplast) Calvin-Benson cycle Light-Independent Reactions
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Photosynthesis Equation - remember forever
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Organelles of photosynthesis Chloroplasts
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Inside the Chloroplast Two outer membranes enclose a semifluid interior, the stroma Thylakoid membrane inside the stroma
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Inside the Chloroplast Photosystems are embedded in thylakoids, containing 200 to 300 pigments and other molecules that trap sun’s energy Two types of photosystems: I and II
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Photoautotrophs –Carbon source is carbon dioxide –Energy source is sunlight (mostly) Heterotrophs –Get carbon and energy by eating autotrophs (plants) and/or one another (cannibalism too) Carbon and Energy Sources
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Photoautotrophs Capture sunlight energy and use it to carry out photosynthesis –Plants –Some bacteria –Many protistans
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Linked Processes Photosynthesis Energy-storing pathway Releases oxygen Requires carbon dioxide Aerobic Respiration Energy-releasing pathway Requires oxygen Releases carbon dioxide
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Photosystem Function: Harvester Pigments Most pigments in photosystem are harvester pigments –When excited by light energy, these pigments transfer energy to adjacent pigment molecules Each transfer involves some energy loss - heat and atomic motion
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ATP and NADPH Formation
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Using the Products of Photosynthesis Phosphorylated glucose is the building block for: –Sucrose The most easily transported plant carbohydrate –Starch The most common storage form
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Summary of Photosynthesis
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