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Lesson Two Photosynthesis

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Lesson Two. Photosynthesis. Photosynthesis. Photosynthesis occurs only in the chlorophyll-containing cells of green plants , algae , and certain protists and bacteria. Photosynthesis. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Lesson Two

Lesson TwoPhotosynthesis

Page 2: Lesson Two

Photosynthesis

• Photosynthesis occurs only in the chlorophyll-containing cells of green plants , algae ,

and certain protists and bacteria.

Page 3: Lesson Two

Photosynthesis

• Overall, it is a process that converts light energy into chemical energy that is stored in the form of molecular bonds.

Carbondioxide

Water Glucose Oxygengas

PHOTOSYNTHESIS

Page 4: Lesson Two

Photosynthesis

• From the point of view of chemistry and energetics, it is the opposite of cellular respiration.

Page 5: Lesson Two

Photosynthesis

• Whereas cellular respiration is highly exergonic and releases energy,

reactants

products

Amounts ofenergy output

Pote

ntia

l ene

rgy

of m

olec

ules

Page 6: Lesson Two

Photosynthesis

• ….photosynthesis requires energy and is highly endergonic.

Pote

ntia

l ene

rgy

of m

olec

ules

reactants

products

Amount of energy input

Page 7: Lesson Two

Photosynthesis

• Photosynthesis starts with CO2 and H2O as raw materials and proceeds through two sets of partial reactions. In the first set, called the light-dependent reactions, water molecules are split (oxidized), O2 is released, and ATP and NADPH are formed.

Page 8: Lesson Two
Page 9: Lesson Two

Photosynthesis

• In the second set, called light-independent reactions, CO2 is reduced (via the addition of H atoms) to carbohydrates. These chemical events rely on the electron carrier NADPH and ATP generated by the first set of reactions.

Page 10: Lesson Two

13 P P P6

6 ATP

6 ADP + P

6 NADPH

6 NADP+

6 P

G3P

Light-independent

reactions (CALVIN CYCLE)

3

OUTPUT: 1 PGlucoseand other compounds

G3P

G3P

4

3 ADP

3 ATP

3CO2

5 P

RuBP 3-PGA

Page 11: Lesson Two

Photosynthesis

• Both sets of reactions take place in chloroplasts.

Page 12: Lesson Two

Photosynthesis

• Most of the enzymes and pigments for the light-dependent reactions are embedded in the thylakoid membrane of chloroplasts.

Page 13: Lesson Two

Photosynthesis

• The dark reactions take place in the stroma.

stroma

Page 14: Lesson Two

How Light Energy Reaches Photosynthetic Cells

• The energy in light photons in the visible part of the spectrum can be captured by biological molecules to do constructive work.

Page 15: Lesson Two

How Light Energy Reaches Photosynthetic Cells

• The pigment chlorophyll in plant cells absorbs photons within a particular absorption spectrum – a statement of the amount of light absorbed by chlorophyll at different wavelengths.

Page 16: Lesson Two

How Light Energy Reaches Photosynthetic Cells

• When light is absorbed it alters the arrangement of electrons in the absorbing molecule. The added energy of the photon boosts the energy condition of the molecule from a stable state to a less-stable excited state.

Page 17: Lesson Two

How Light Energy Reaches Photosynthetic Cells

• During the light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis, as the absorbing molecule returns to the ground state, the “excess” excitation energy is transmitted to other molecules and stored as chemical energy.

Page 18: Lesson Two

How Light Energy Reaches Photosynthetic Cells

• All photosynthetic organisms contain various classes of chlorophylls and one or more carotenoid (accessory) pigments that also contribute to photosynthesis.

Page 19: Lesson Two

How Light Energy Reaches Photosynthetic Cells

• Groups of pigment molecules called antenna complexes are present on thylakoids.

Page 20: Lesson Two

How Light Energy Reaches Photosynthetic Cells

• Light striking any one of the pigment molecules is funneled to a special chlorophyll a molecule, termed a reaction-center chlorophyll, which directly participates in photosynthesis.

Page 21: Lesson Two

How Light Energy Reaches Photosynthetic Cells

• Most photosynthetic organisms possess two types of reaction-center chlorophylls, P680 and P700, each associated with an electron acceptor molecule and an electron donor. These aggregations are known respectively as photosystem I (P700) and photosystem II (P680).

Page 22: Lesson Two

How Light Energy Reaches Photosynthetic Cells

Page 23: Lesson Two

The Light-Dependent Reaction: Converting Solar Energy into

Chemical-Bond Energy

Page 24: Lesson Two

The Light-Dependent Reaction

• The photosystems of the light-dependent reactions are responsible for the packaging of light energy in the chemical compounds ATP and NADPH. The packaging takes place through a series of oxidation-reduction reactions set in motion when light strikes the P680 reaction center in photosystem II.

Page 25: Lesson Two

The Light-Dependent Reaction

• In this initial event water molecules are cleaved, oxygen is released, and electrons are donated. These electrons are accepted first by plastoquinone and then by a series of carriers as they descend an electron transport chain.

Page 26: Lesson Two

The Light-Dependent Reaction

• For each four electrons that pass down the chain, two ATPs are formed. The last acceptor in the chain is the P700 reaction center of photosystem I.

Page 27: Lesson Two

The Light-Dependent Reaction

• At this point incoming photons boost the energy of the electrons, and they are accepted by ferredoxin.

Page 28: Lesson Two

The Light-Dependent Reaction

• Ferredoxin is then reoxidized, and the coenzyme NADP+ is reduced to the NADPH. The ATP generated previously and the NADPH then take part in the light-independent reactions.

Page 29: Lesson Two

The Light –Dependent Reaction

• The production of ATP from the transport of electrons excited by light energy down an electron transport chain is termed photophosphorylation. The one-way flow of electrons through photosystems II and I is called noncyclic photophosphorylation;

Page 30: Lesson Two

The Light-Dependent Reaction

• …plants also derive additional ATP through cyclic photophosphorylation, in which some electrons are shunted back through the electron transport chain between photosystems II and I.

Page 31: Lesson Two

The Light-Independent Reactions: Building

Carbohydrates• In the light-independent reactions of

photosynthesis, which are driven by ATP and NADPH, CO2 is converted to carbohydrate. The reactions are also known as the Calvin-Benson cycle.

Page 32: Lesson Two

The Light-Independent Reactions

• Atmospheric CO2 is fixed as it reacts with ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP), a reaction that is catalyzed by the enzyme ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (rubisco).

Page 33: Lesson Two

The Light-Independent Reactions

• The reduction of CO2 to carbohydrate (fructose 1,6-bisphosphate) is completed via several more steps of the cycle.

Glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate

Page 34: Lesson Two

The Light-Independent Reactions

• Finally, RuBP is regenerated so that the cycle may continue.

Page 35: Lesson Two

Oxygen: An Inhibitor of Photosynthesis

• High levels of oxygen in plant cells can disrupt photosynthesis and can also cause photorespiration – an inefficient form of the dark reactions in which O2 is fixed rather than CO2 and no carbohydrate is produced.

rubisco

Page 36: Lesson Two

Reprieve from Photorespiration: The C4 pathway

• Most plants are C3 plants; they experience decreased carbohydrate production under hot, dry conditions as a result of the effects of photorespiration.

Page 37: Lesson Two

The C4 pathway

• Among C4 plants, however, special leaf anatomy and a unique biochemical pathway enable the plant to thrive in arid conditions.

Page 38: Lesson Two

The C4 pathway

• Thus C4 plants lessen photorespiration by carrying out photosynthesis only in cells that are insulated from high levels of CO2. They also possess a novel mechanism for carbon fixation.

Page 39: Lesson Two

Glossary

• Absorption spectrum• Calvin-Benson cycle• Carotenoid• Chlorophyll• Chloroplast• Cyclic photophosphorylati

on• C3 plant• C4 plant• Light-dependent reactions

• Light-independent reactions

• Noncyclic photophosphorylation

• Photon• Photophosphorylation• Photosynthesis• Photosystem• Ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate• thylakoid

Page 40: Lesson Two

Absorption spectrum

• A graphic representation of the amount of light energy absorbed by a substance plotted against the wavelength of the light (From Taiz and

Zeiger, Plant Physiology, 3e).

Page 41: Lesson Two

Calvin-Benson Cycle (Calvin Cycle)

• The biochemical pathway for the reduction of CO2 to carbohydrate. The cycle involves three phases.

Page 42: Lesson Two

Carotenoid

• Linear polyenes arranged as a planar zigzag chain, with the repeating conjugated double-bond system –CH=CH-CCH3

=CH-. These orange pigments serve both as antenna pigments and photoprotective agents.

Page 43: Lesson Two

Chlorophyll

• A group of light absorbing green pigments active in photosynthesis.

Page 44: Lesson Two

Chloroplast

• The organelle that is the site of photosynthesis in eukaryotic photosynthetic organisms.

Page 45: Lesson Two

Cyclic photophosphorylation (cyclic electron flow)

• In photosystem I, flow of electrons from the electron acceptors through the cytochrome b6f complex and back to P700, coupled to proton pumping into the lumen. This electron flow energizes ATP synthesis but does not oxidize water or reduce NADP+.

Page 46: Lesson Two

C3 plant

• Plants in which the first stable product of photosynthetic CO2 fixation is a three-carbon compound (i.e. 3-phosphoglycerate).

Page 47: Lesson Two

C4 plant

• Plants in which the first stable product of CO2 assimilation in mesophyll cells is a four-carbon compound that is immediately transported to bundle sheath cells and decarboxylated. The CO2 released enters the Calvin cycle.

Page 48: Lesson Two

Light-dependent reactions

• photosynthetic electron transport

• Electrons flow from light-excited chlorophyll and the oxidation of water, through PSII and PSI, to the final electron acceptor NADP+.

Page 49: Lesson Two

Light-independent reactions

• Dark reactions• Calvin-Benson cycle• Calvin cycle

Page 50: Lesson Two

Noncyclic photophosphorylation

• Noncyclic electron flow

• Electrons flow from light-excited chlorophyll and the oxidation of water, through PSII and PSI, to the final electron acceptor NADP+.

Page 51: Lesson Two

Photon

• A discrete physical unit of radiant energy.

• A particle that has zero mass or charge and unit spin, the quantum of the electromagnetic field and carrier of the electromagnetic force

Page 52: Lesson Two

Photophosphorylation

• The formation of ATP from ADP and inorganic phosphate (Pi) using light energy stored in the proton gradient across the thylakoid membrane.

Page 53: Lesson Two

Photorespiration

• Uptake of atmospheric O2 with a concomitant release of CO2 by illuminated leaves. Molecular oxygen serves as substrate for rubisco and the formed 2-phosphoglycolate enters the photorespiratory carbon oxidation cycle. The activity of the cycle recovers some of the carbon found in 2-phosphoglycolate, but some is lost to the atmosphere.

Page 54: Lesson Two

Photosynthesis

• The conversion of light energy to chemical energy by photosynthetic pigments using water and CO2, and producing carbohydrates.

Page 55: Lesson Two

Photosystem

• A functional unit in the chloroplast that harvests light energy to power electron transfer and to generate a proton motive force used to synthesize ATP.

Page 56: Lesson Two

Ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP)

• A compound with a backbone of five carbon atoms that is required for carbon fixation in the Calvin-Benson cycle of photosysthesis.

Page 57: Lesson Two

Thylakoid

• The specialized, internal, chlorophyll containing membranes of the chloroplast where light absorption and the chemical reactions of photosynthesis take place.