Biology
II CHAPTER 10 NOTES:
Photosynthesis transforms
solar light energy trapped by chloroplasts into chemical bond energy stored in
sugar and other organic molecules. This process:
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Synthesizes energy- rich organic molecules from the
energy-poor molecules, CO2 and H2O +
sunlight.
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Uses CO2 as a carbon source and light
energy as the energy source.
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Directly or indirectly supplies energy to most living
organisms.
I. Plants and other autotrophs are the producers of the
biosphere.
Organisms acquire organic molecules used for energy and
carbon skeletons by one of two nutritional modes: 1.) Autotrophic Nutrition or 2.) Heterotrophic
Nutrition.
Autotrophic nutrition –(Auto
–self; trophos-feed) Nutritional mode of synthesizing organic molecules from
inorganic raw materials
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EXAMPLES of
autotrophic organisms are plants, which require only
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Because
autotrophic organisms produce organic molecules that enter an ecosystem’s food
store, autotrophs are also know as producers.
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Autotrophic organisms require an energy source to
synthesize organic molecules. That energy source may be from light(photoautotropic) or form the oxidation
of inorganic substances(chemoautrophic).
Photoautotrophs = Autotrophic organisms
that use light as an energy source to synthesize organic molecules. Examples
are photosynthetic organisms such as plants, algae and some prokaryotes.
Chemoautotrophs = Autotrophic organisms
that use the oxidation of inorganic substances, such as sulfur or ammonia, as
an energy source to synthesize organic molecules. Unique to some bacteria, this
is a rarer form of autotrophic nutrition.
Heterotrophic nutrition = (Heteros=other;
trophes =feed) Nutritional mode of acquiring organic molecules from compounds
produced by other organisms; heterotrophs are unable to synthesize organic
molecules from inorganic raw materials.
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Heterotrophs are also known as consumers.
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Examples are animals that eat plants or other animals.
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Examples also include decomposers, heterotrophs that decompose and feed on organic
litter. Most fungi and many bacteria are decomposers.
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Most heterotrophs depend on photoautotrophs for food
and oxygen(a by-product of photosynthesis).
II. Chloroplasts are the sites of photosynthesis in plants
Although all green plant parts have chloroplasts,
leaves are the major organs of photosynthesis in most plants.
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Chlorophyll
is the green pigment in chloroplasts that gives a leaf its color
and that absorbs the light energy used to drive photosynthesis.
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Chloroplasts are primarily in cells of mesophyll, green tissue in the leaf’s
interior.
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CO2 enters and O2
exits the leaf through microscopic pores called stomata.
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Water absorbed by the roots is transported to leaves
through veins or vascular bundles which
also export sugar from leaves to nonphotosynthetic parts of the plant
Chloroplasts are lens-shaped organelles measuring about
2-4 um by 4-7 um. These organelles are
divided into three functional compartments by a system of membranes:
1.
Intermembrane
Space: The
chloroplast is bound by a double membrane which portions its contents from the
cytosol. A narrow intermembrane space
separates the two membranes
2.
Thylakoid
Space: Thylakoids
form another membranous system within the chloroplast. The thylakoid membrane segregates the
interior of the chloroplast into two compartments: thylakoid space and stroma
Thylakoids=
flattened membranous sacs inside the chloroplast
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Chlorophyll is found in the thylakoid membranes
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Thylakoids function in the steps of photosynthesis that
initially convert light energy to chemical energy
Thylakoid
Space= Space inside the thylakoid
Grana=
(Singular, granum) Stacks of the thylakoids in a chloroplast
3.
Stroma. Reactions that use chemical
energy to convert carbon dioxide to sugar occur in the stroma, viscous fluid
outside the thylakoids
Photosynthetic prokaryotes lack chloroplasts, but have
chlorophyll built into the plasma membrane or into membranes of numerous
vesicles within the cell.
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These membranes function in a manner similar to the
thylakoid membranes of chloroplasts
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Phosynthetic membranes of cynobacteria are usually
arranged in parallel stacks of flattened sacs similar to the thylakoids of
chloroplasts
III. Evidence that chloroplasts split water molecules enabled researchers to track atoms through photosynthesis: science as a process
Some steps in photosynthesis are not yet understood, but the following summary equation has been known since the early 1800’s:
6CO2+12H2O+ light energy C6H12O6+6O2+6H20
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Glucose (C6H12O6) is
shown in the summary equation, though the main products of photosynthesis are
other carbohydrates
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Water is on both sides of the equation, because
photosynthesis consumes 12 molecules and forms 6
Indicating the net consumption of water simplifies the
equation:
6CO2 + 6H2O+ light energy C6H12+ 6O2
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In this form, the summary equation for photosynthesis
is the reverse of that for cellular respiration
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Photosynthesis and cellular respiration both occur in
plant cells, but plants do not simply reverse the steps of respiration to make
food
The simplest form of the equation is: CO2 + H2O CH2O+O2
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CH2O symbolizes the general form for a carbohydrate
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In this form, the summary equation emphasizes the
production of a sugar molecule, one carbon at a time. Six repetitions produces a glucose molecule
The discovery that O2 released by plants
is derived from H2O and not from CO2, was one of the
earliest clues to the mechanism of photosynthesis
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In
the 1930’s, C.B. van Niel from Stanford Univ. challenged an early model which
predicted that:
a.
O2
released during photosynthesis comes from CO2
CO2 C+O2
b.
CO2
is split and water is added to the carbon
C+H2O CH2O
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Van
Niel studied bacteria that use hydrogen sulfide (H2S) rather than H2O
doe photosynthesis and that produce yellow sulfur globules as a by-product
CO2 + 2H2S CH2O + H2O + 2S
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Van
Niel deduced that these bacteria split H2S and use H to make sugar. He generalized that all photosynthetic
organisms require hydrogen, but that the source varies:
General: CO2+ 2H2X CH2O+H2O + 2X
Sulfur bacteria:CO2 + 2H2S CH2O + H2O + 2S
Plants: CO2+2H2O CH2O+ H2O +O2
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Van
Niel thus hypothesized that plants split water as a source of hydrogen and
release oxygen as a by-product
Scientists later confirmed van Niel’s hypothesis by
using a heavy isotope of oxygen (18O) as a tracer to follow oxygen’s
fate during photosynthesis
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If
water was labeled with tracer, released oxygen was 18O:
Experiment 1: CO2+H2O * CH2O+H2O+O2*
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If
the 18O was introduced to the plants as CO2, the tracer did not appear in the
released oxygen:
Experiment 2: CO2*+H2O CH2O*+H2O* +O2
An important result of photosynthesis is the
extraction of hydrogen from water and its incorporation into sugar.
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Electrons
associated with hydrogen have more potential energy in organic molecules than
they do in water, where the electrons are closer to electronegative oxygen
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Energy
is stored in sugar and other food molecules in the form of these high-energy
electrons
B.Photosynthesis as a Redox
Process
Respiration is an exergonic redox process; energy is
released from the oxidation of sugar
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Electrons
associated with sugar’s hydrogen lose potential energy as carriers transport
them to oxygen, forming water
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Electronegative
oxygen pulls electrons down the electron transport chain, and the potential
energy released is used by the mitochondrion to produce ATP
Photosynthesis is an endergonic redox process;
energy is required to reduce carbon dioxide
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Light
is the energy source that boosts potential energy of electrons as they are
moved from water to sugar
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When
water is split, electrons are transferred from the water to carbon dioxide
reducing it to sugar
IV.
The light reactions and the
Calvin cycle cooperate in transforming light to the chemical energy of
food: an overview
Photosynthesis occurs in two stages: the light reactions and the Calvin cycle
Light reactions- in photosynthesis, the reactions
that convert light energy to chemical bond energy in ATP and NADPH. These reactions:
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Occur
in the thylakoid membranes of chloroplasts
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Reduce
NADP+ to NADPH
o Light absorbed by
chlorophyll provides the energy to reduce NADP+ to NADPH, which
temporarily stores the energized electrons transferred from water
o NADP+ ( nicotinamide adenine
dinucleotide phosphate), a coenzyme similar to NAD+ in respiration,
is reduced by adding a pair of electrons along with a hydrogen nucleus, or H+
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Give
off O2 as a by-product from the splitting of water
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Generate
ATP. The light reactions power the
addition of a phosphate group to ADP in a process called photophosphorylation
Calvin cycle= In photosynthesis, the carbon-fixation
reactions that assimilate atmospheric CO2 and then reduce it to a
carbohydrate; named for Melvin Calvin.
These reactions:
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Occur
in the stroma of the chloroplast
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First
incorporate atmospheric CO2 into existing organic molecules by a
process called carbon fixation, and then reduce fixed carbon to carbohydrate
Carbon fixation- the process
of incorporating CO2 into organic molecules
The Calvin cycle reactions do not require light
directly, but reduction of CO2 to sugar requires the products of the
light reactions:
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NADPH
provides the reducing power
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ATP
provides the chemical energy
Chloroplasts thus use light energy to make sugar by coordinating the two stages
of photosynthesis.
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Light
reactions occur in the thylakoids of chloroplasts
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Calvin
cycle reactions occur in the stroma
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As
NADP+ and ADP contact thylakoid membranes, they pick up electrons
and phosphate respectively, and then transfer their high-energy cargo to the
Calvin cycle
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The light reactions
transform solar energy to the chemical energy of ATP and NADPH: a closer look
To understand how the thylakoids of chloroplasts
transform light energy into the chemical energy of ATP NADPH, it is necessary
to know some important properties of light.
A.
The Nature of Sunlight
Sunlight is electromagnetic energy. The quantum mechanical model of
electromagnetic radiation describes light as having behavior that is both
wavelike and particle like
1.
Wavelike
properties of light
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Electromagnetic
energy is a form of energy that travels in rhythmic waves which are
disturbances of electric and magnetic fields
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A
wavelength is the distance between the crests of electromagneticwaves
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The
electromagnetic spectrum ranges from wavelength that are less than a nanometer
(gamma rays) to those that are more than a kilometer (radio waves)
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Visible
light, which is detectable by the human eye, is only a small portion of the
electromagnetic spectrum and ranges from about 380 to 750 nm. The wavelength most important for
photosynthesis are within this range of visible light
2.
Particle
like properties of light
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Light
also behaves as if it consists of discrete particles or quanta called photons
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Each
photon has a fixed quantity of energy which is inversely proportional to the
wavelength of light. For example, a
photon of violet light has nearly twice as much energy as a photon of red light
The sun radiates the full spectrum of
electronegative energy
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The
atmosphere acts as a selective window that allows visible light to pass through
while screening out a substantial fraction of other radiation
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The
visible range of light is the radiation that drives photosynthesis
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Blue
and red, the two wavelengths most effectively absorbed by chlorophyll, are the
colors most useful as energy for the light reactions
B.
Photosynthetic
Pigments: The Light Receptors
Light may be reflected, transmitted or absorbed when
it contacts matter.
Figments- Substances that absorb visible light
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Different
pigments absorb different wavelength of light
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Wavelength
that are absorbed disappear, so a pigment that absorbs all wavelengths appears
black
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When
which light, which contains all the wavelengths of visible light, illuminates a
pigment, the color you see is the color most reflected or transmitted by the
pigment. For example, a leaf appears
green because chlorophyll absorbs red and blue light but transmits and reflects
green light
Each pigment has a characteristic absorption
spectrum or pattern of wavelength that it absorbs. It is expressed as a graph of absorption versus wavelength
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The
absorption spectrum for a pigment in solution can be determined by using a
spectrophotometer, an instrument used to measure what proportion of a specific
wavelength of light is absorbed or transmitted by the pigment
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Since
chlorophyll a is the light-absorbing
pigment that participates directly in the light reactions, the absorption
spectrum of chlorophyll a provides
clues as to which wavelengths of visible light are most effective for
photosynthesis
A graph of wavelength versus rate of photosynthesis
is called an action spectrum and profiles the relative effectiveness of
different wavelengths of visible light for driving photosynthesis
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The
action spectrum of photosynthesis can be determined by illuminating
chloroplasts with different wavelengths of light and measuring some indicator
of photosynthetic rate, such as oxygen release or carbon dioxide consumption
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It
is apparent from the action spectrum of photosynthesis that blue and red light
are the most effective wavelengths for photosynthesis and green light is the
least effective
The action spectrum for photosynthesis does not
exactly match the absorption spectrum for chlorophyll a
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Since
chlorophyll a is not the only pigment
in chloroplasts that absorb light, the absorption spectrum for chlorophyll a underestimates the effectiveness of
some wavelengths
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Even
though only special chlorophyll a
molecules can participate directly in the light reactions, other pigments,
called accessory pigments, can absorb light and transfer the energy to
chlorophyll a
The accessory pigments expand the range of
wavelengths available for photosynthesis.
These pigments include:
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Chlorophyll
b, a yellow-green pigment with a
structure similar to chlorophyll a. This minor structural difference gives
the pigments slightly different absorption spectra
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Carotenoids,
yellow and orange hydrocarbons that are built into the thylakoid membrane with
the two types of chlorophyll
C.
The Photoexcitation of
Chlorophyll
What happens when chlorophyll or accessory pigments
absorb photons?
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Colors
of absorbed wavelengths disappear from the spectrum of transmitted and
reflected light
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The
absorbed photon boosts one of the pigment molecule’s electrons in its lowest
energy state (ground state) to an orbital of higher potential energy (excited
state)
The only photons absorbed by a molecule are those with an energy state equal to
the difference in energy between the ground state and excited state
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This
energy difference varies from one molecule to another. Pigments have unique absorption spectra
because pigments only absorb photons corresponding to specific wavelengths
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The
photon energy absorbed is converted to potential energy of an electron elevated
to the excited state
The excited state is unstable, so excited electrons
quickly fall back to the ground state orbital, releasing excess energy in the
process. This related energy may be:
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Dissipated
as heat
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Reradiated
as a photon of lower energy and longer wavelength that the original light that
excited the pigment. This afterglow is
called fluorescence
Pigments molecules do not fluoresce when in the
thylakoid membranes, because nearby primary electron acceptor molecules trap
excited state electrons that have absorbed photons
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In
this redox reaction, chlorophyll is photooxidized by the absorption of light
energy and the electron acceptor is reduced
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Because
no primary electron acceptor is present, isolated chlorophyll fluoresces in the
red part of the spectrum and dissipates heat
D.
Photosystems: Light-Harvesting Complexes of the Thylakoid
Membrane
Chlorophyll a,
chlorophyll b and the carotenoids are
assembled into photosystems located within the thylakoid membrane. Each photosystem is composed of:
1.
antenna
complex
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Several
hundred chlorophyll a, chlorophyll b and carotenoid molecules are
light-gathering antennae that absorb photons and pass the energy from molecule
to molecule. This process of resonance
energy transfer is called inductive resonance
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Different
pigments within the antennal complex have slightly different absorption spectra,
so collectively they can absorb photons from a wider range of the light
spectrum that would be possible with only one type of pigment molecule
2.
reaction-center
chlorophyll
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Only
one of the many chlorophyll a
molecules in each complex can actually transfer an excited electron to initiate
the light reactions. This specialized
chlorophyll a is located in the
reaction center
3.
primary
electron acceptor
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Located
near the reaction center, a primary acceptor molecule traps excited state
electrons released from the reaction from the reaction center chlorophyll
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The
transfer of excited state electrons from chlorophyll to primary electron
acceptor is the first step of the light reactions. The energy stored in the trapped electrons powers the synthesis
of ATP and NADPH is subsequent steps
Two types of photosystems are located in the
thylakoid membranes, photosystem I and photosystem II.
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The
reaction center of photosystem I has a specialized chlorophyll a molecule known as P700, which absorbs
best at 700 nm (the far red portion of the spectrum)
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The
reaction center of photosystems II has a specialized chlorophyll a molecule known as P680, which absorbs
best at a wavelength of 680 nm
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P700
and P680 are identical chlorophyll a
molecules, but each is associated with a different protein. This affects their electron distribution and
results in slightly different absorption spectra
E.
Noncyclic Electron Flow
There are two possible routes for electron flow
during the light reactions: noncyclic
flow and cyclic flow.
Both photosystem I and photosystem II function and
cooperates in noncyclic electron flow which transforms light energy to chemical
energy stored in the bonds of NADPH and ATP.
This process:
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Occurs
in the thylakoid membrane
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Passes
electrons continuously from water to NADP+
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Produces
ATP by noncyclic photophosphorylation
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Produces
NADPH
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Produces
O2
Light excites electrons from P700, the reaction
center chlorophyll in photosystem I.
These excited state electrons do not return to the reaction center
chlorophyll, but are ultimately stored NADPH, which will later be the electron
donor in the Calvin Cycle
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Initially,
the excited state electrons are transferred from P700 to the primary electron
acceptor for photosystem I
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The
primary electron acceptor passes these excited state electrons to ferredoxin
(Fd), an iron-containing protein
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NADP+
reductase catalyzes the redox reaction that transfers these electrons from
ferredoxin to NADP+, producing reduced coenzyme-NADPH
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The
oxidized P700 chlorophyll becomes an oxidizing agent as its electron “holes”
must be filled; photosystem II supplies the electrons to fill these holes
When the antenna assembly of photosystem II absorbs
light, the energy is transferred to the P680 reaction center
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Electrons
ejected from P680 are trapped by the photosystem II primary electrons acceptor
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The
electrons are then transferred from this primary electron acceptor to an
electron transport chain embedded in the thylakoid membrane. The first carrier in the chain,
plastoquinone (Pq) receives the electrons form the primary electron
acceptor. In a cascade of redox
reactions, the electrons travel from Pq to
a complex of two cytochromes to plastocynanin (Pc) to P700 of
photosystem I
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As
these electrons pass down the electron transport chain, they lose potential
energy until they reach the ground state of P700
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These
electrons then fill the electron vacancies left in photosystem I when NADP+
was reduced
Electrons from P680 flow to P700 during noncyclic
electron flow, restoring the missing electrons in P700. This, however , leaves the P680 reaction
center of photosystem II with missing electrons; the oxidized P680 chlorophyll
thus becomes a strong oxidizing agent
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A
water-splitting enzyme extracts electrons from water and passes them to
oxidized P680, which has a high affinity for electrons
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As
water is oxidized, the removal of electrons splits water into two hydrogen ions
and an oxygen atom
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The
oxygen atom immediately combines with a second oxygen atom to form O2. It is this water-splitting step of
photosynthesis that releases O2
As excited electrons give up energy along the
transport chain to P700, the thylakoid membrane couples the exergonic flow of
electrons to the endergonic reactions that phosphorylate ADP to ATP
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This
coupling mechanism is chemiosmosis
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Some
electron carriers can only transport electrons in the company of protons
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The
protons are picked up on one side of the thylakoid membrane and deposited on
the opposite side as the electrons move to the next member of the transport
chain
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The
electron flow thus stores energy in the form of a proton gradient across the
thylakoid membrane- a proton-motive force
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An
ATP snythase enzyme in the thylakoid membrane uses the proton-motive force to
make ATP. This process if called
photophosphorylation because the energy required is light
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This
form of ATP production is called noncyclic photophosphorylation
F.
Cyclic Electron Flow
Cyclic electron flow is the simplest pathway, but
involves only photosystem I and generates ATP without producing NADPH or
evolving oxygen.
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It
is cyclic because excited electrons that leave from chlorophyll a at the reaction center return to the
reaction center
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As
photons are absorbed by Photosystem I, P700 reaction center chlorophyll
releases excited-state electrons to the primary electrons acceptor; which in
turn, passes them to ferredoxin. From
there the electrons take an alternate path that sends them tumbling down the
electron transport to P700. This is the
same electron transport chain used in noncyclic electron flow
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With
each redox reaction along the electron transport chain, electrons lose
potential energy until they return to their ground-state orbital in the P700
reaction center
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The
exergonic flow of electrons is coupled to ATP production by the process of
chemiosmosis. This process of ATP production
is called cyclic photophosphorylation
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Absorption
of another two photons of light by the pigments send a second pair of electrons
through the cyclic pathway
The function of the cyclic pathway is to produce
additional ATP
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It
does so without the production of NADPH of O2
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Cyclic
photophosphorylation supplements the ATP supply required for the Calvin cycle
and other metabolic pathways. The
noncyclic pathway produces approximately equal amounts of ATP and NADPH, which
is not enough ATP to meet demand
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NADPH
concentration might influence whether electrons flow through cyclic or
noncyclic pathways
G.
A Comparison of Chemiosmosis
in Chloroplasts and Mitochondria
Chemiosmosis- The coupling of exergonic electron
flow down an electron transport chain to endergonic ATP production by the
creation of an electrochemical proton gradient across a membrane. The proton gradient drives ATP synthesis as
protons diffuse back across the membrane
Chemiosmosis in chloroplasts and chemiosmosis in
mitochondria are similar in several ways:
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An
electron transport chain assembled in a membrane translocates protons across
the membrane as electrons pass through a series of carriers that are
progressively more electronegative
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An
ATP snythase complex built into the same membrane, couple the diffusion of
hydrogen ions down their gradient to the phosophorylation of ADP
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The
ATP snythase complexes and some electron carriers (including quinines and
cytochromes) are very similar in both chloroplasts and mitochondria
Oxidative phosophorylation in mitochondria and
photophosphorylation in chloroplasts differ in the following ways:
1.
Electron
Transport Chain
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Mitochondria
transfer chemical energy from food molecules to ATP. The high-energy electrons that pass down the transport chain are
extracted by the oxidation of food molecules
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Chloroplasts
transform light energy into chemical energy.
Photosystems capture light energy and use it to drive electrons to the
top of the transport chain
2.
Spatial
Organization
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The
inner mitochondrial membrane pumps protons from the matrix out to the
intermembrane space, which is a reservoir of protons that power ATP snythase
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The
chloroplast’s thylakoid membrane pumps protons from the stroma into the
thylakoid compartment, which functions as a proton reservoir. ATP is produced as protons diffuse from the
thylakoid compartment back to the stroma through ATP snythase complexes that
have catalytic heads on the membrane’s stroma side. Thus, ATP forms in the stroma where it drives sugar synthesis
during the Calvin cycle
There is a large proton of pH gradient across the
thylakoid membrane
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When
chloroplasts are illuminated, there is thousand-fold difference in H+
concentration. The pH in the thylakoid
compartment is reduced to about 5 while the pH in the stroma increases to about
8
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When
chloroplasts are in the dark, the pH gradient disappears, but can be
reestablished if chloroplasts are illuminated
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Andre
Jagendorf (1960’s) produced compelling evidence for chromiosmosis when he
induced chloroplasts to produce ATP in the dark by using artificial means to
create a pH gradient. His experiments
demonstrated that during photophosphorylation, the function of the photosystems
and the electron transport chain is to create a protonmotive force that drives
ATP synthesis
A tentative model for the organization of the
thylakoid membrane includes the following:
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Proton
pumping by the thylakoid membrane depends on an asymmetric placement of
electron carriers that accept and release protons (H+)
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There
are three steps in the light reactions that contribute to the proton gradient
across the thylakoid membrane:
1.
Water
is split by Photosystem II on the thylakoid side, releasing protons in the
process
2.
As
plastoquinone (Pq), a mobile carrier, transfers electrons to the cytochrome
complex, it translocated protons form the stroma to the thylakoid space
3.
Protons
in the stroma are removed from solution as NADP+ is reduced to NADPH
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NADPH
and ATP are produced on the side of the membrane facing the stroma where sugar
is synthesized by the Calvin cycle
Summary of the Light
Reactions:
During noncyclic electron flow, the photosystems, of
the thylakoid membrane transform light energy to the chemical energy stored in
NADPH and ATP. This process:
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Pushes
low energy-state electrons from water to NADPH, where they are stored at a
higher state of potential energy.
NADPH, in turn, is the electron donor used to reduce carbon dioxide to
sugar (Calvin Cycle)
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Produces
ATP from this light driven electron current
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Produces
oxygen as a by-product
During cyclic electron flow, electrons ejected from
P700 reach ferredoxin and flow BACK to P700.
This process:
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Produces
ATP
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Unlike
noncyclic electron flow, does NOT produce NADPH or O2
VI.The Calvin cycle uses ATP
and NADPH to convert CO2 to sugar: a closer look
ATP and NADPH produced by the light reactions are
used in the Calvin cycle to reduce carbon dioxide to sugar.
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The
Calvin cycle is similar to the Krebs cycle in that the starting material is
regenerated by the end of the cycle
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Carbon
enters the Calvin cycle as CO2 and leaves as sugar
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ATP
is the energy source, while NADPH is the reducing agent that adds high-energy
electrons to form sugar
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The
Calvin cycle actually produces a three-carbon sugar glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate
(G3P)
For the Calvin cycle to synthesize one molecule of
sugar (G3P), three molecules of CO2 must enter the cycle. The cycle may be divided into three phases:
Phase 1:
Carbon Fixation. The Calvin
cycle beings when each molecule of CO2 is attached to a five-carbon
sugar, ribulose biphosphate (RuBP)
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This
reaction is catalyzed by the enzyme RuBP carboxylase (rubisco)- one of the most
abundant proteins on Earth
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The
product of this reaction is an unstable six-carbon intermediate that
immediately splits into two molecules of 3-phosphoglycerate
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For
every three CO2 molecules that enter the Calvin cycle via rubisco,
there RuBP molecules are carboxylated forming six molecules of
3-phosphoglycerate
Phase 2:
Reduction. This endergonic
reduction phase is a two-step process that couple ATP hydrolysis with the reduction
of 3-phohsphoglycerate to glyceraldehyde phosphate
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An
enzyme phosphorylates 3-phosphoglycerate by transferring a phosphate group from
ATP. This reaction:
Þ
Produces
1, 3-bisphosphiglycerate
Þ
Uses
six ATP molecules to produce six molecules of 1, 3-bisphosphoglycerate
Þ
Primes
1, 3-bisphosphoglycerate for the addition of high energy electrons from NADPH
¥
Electrons
from NADPH reduce the carboxyl group of 1, 3-bisphophoglycerate to the aldehyde
group of Glyceraldenhyde 3-phosphate (G3P)
Þ
The
product, G3P, stores more potential energy than the initial reactant,
3-phosphoglycerate
Þ
G3P
is the same three-carbon sugar produced when glycolysis splits glucose
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For
every three CO2 molecules that enter the Calvin cycle, six G3P
molecules are produced, only one of which can be counted as net gain
Þ
The
cycle begins with three five-carbon RuBP molecules- a total of 15 carbons
Þ
The
six G3P molecules produced contain 18 carbons, a net gain of three carbons from
CO2
Þ
One
G3P molecule exits the cycle; the other five are recycled to regenerate three
molecules of RuBP
Phase 3:
Regeneration of Starting Material (RuBP). A complex series of reactions rearranges the carbon skeletons of
five G3P molecules into three RuBP molecules
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These
reactions require three ATP molecules
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RuBP
is thus regenerated to begin the cycle again
For the net synthesis of one G3P molecule, the
Calvin cycle uses the products of the light reactions:
¥
9
ATP molecules
¥
6
NADPH molecules
G3P produced by the Calvin cycle is the raw material
used to synthesize glucose and other carbohydrates
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The
Calvin cycle uses 18 ATP and 12 NADPH molecules to produce one glucose molecule
VII. Alternative mechanisms
of carbon fixation have evolved in hot, arid climates
A.
Photorespiration: An evolutionary Relic?
A metabolic pathway called photorespiration reduces
the yield of photosynthesis
Photorespiration= In plants, a metabolic pathway
that consumes oxygen, evolves carbon dioxide, produces no ATP and decreases
photosynthetic output
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Occurs
because the active site of rubisco can accept O2 as well as CO2
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Produces
no ATP molecules
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Decreases
photosynthetic output by reducing organic molecules used in the Calvin cycle
When the O2 concentration in the leaf’s
air spaces is higher that CO2 concentration, rubisco accepts O2
and transfers it to RuBP. (The “photo”
in photorespiration refers to the fact that this pathway usually occurs in
light when photosynthesis reduces CO2 and raises O2 in
the leaf spaces
Some scientists believe that photorespiration is a
metabolic relic from earlier times when the atmosphere contained less oxygen
and more carbon dioxide than is present today
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Under
these conditions, when rubisco evolved, the inability of the enzyme’s active
site to distinguish carbon dioxide from oxygen would have made little
difference
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This
affinity for oxygen has been retained by rubisco and some photorespiration is
bound to occur
Whether photorespiration is beneficial to plants is
not known
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It
is known that some crop plants (e.g. soybeans) lose as much as 50% of the
carbon fixed by the Calvin cycle to photorespiration
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If
photorespiration could be reduced in some agricultural plants, crop yields and
food supplies would increase
Photorespiration is fostered by hot, dry, bright
days/
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Under
these conditions, plants close their stomata to prevent dehydration by reducing
water loss from the leaf
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Photosynthesis
then depletes available carbon dioxide and increases oxygen within the leaf air
spaces. This condition favors
photorespiration
Certain species of plants, which live in hot arid climates,
have evolved alternate modes of carbon fixation that minimize photorespiration.
C4 and CAM are the two most important of these photosynthetic
adaptations
B.
C4 Plants
The Calvin cycle occurs in most plants and produces
3-phosphoglycerate, a three-carbon compound, as the first stable intermediate
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These
plants are called C3 plants because the first stable intermediate
has three carbons
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Agriculturally
important C3 plants include rice, wheat and soybeans
Many plant species preface that Calvin cycle with reactions
that incorporate carbon dioxide into four-carbon compounds
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These
plants are called C4 plants
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The
C4 pathway is used by several thousand species in at least 19
families including corn and sugarcane, important agricultural grasses
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This
pathway is adaptive, because it enhances carbon fixation under conditions that
favor photorespiration, such as hot, arid environments
Leaf anatomy of C4 plants spatially
segregates the Calvin cycle from the initial incorporation of CO2
into organic compounds. There are two distinct types of photosynthetic cells:
1.
Bundle-sheath
cells
o Are arranged into tightly
packed sheaths around the veins on the leaf
o Thylakoids in the
chloroplasts of bundle-sheath cells are not stacked into grana
o The Calvin cycle is confined
to the chloroplasts of the bundle sheath
2.
Mesophyll
cells
o Are more loosely arranged in
the area between the bundle sheath and the leaf surface
The Calvin cycle of C4 plants is preceded
by incorporation of CO2 into organic compounds in the mesophyll
Step
1: CO2 is added to
phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) to form oxaloacetate, a four-carbon product
o PEP carboxylase is the
enzyme that adds CO2 to PEP.
Compared to rubisco, it has a much greater affinity for CO2 and has no
affinity for O2
o Thus, PEP carboxylase can
fix CO2 efficiently when rubisco cannot-under hot, dry conditions
that cause stomata to close, CO2 concentrations to drop and O2 concentrations
to rise
Step 2: After CO2 has been fixed by
mesophyll cells, they convert oxaloacetate to another four-carbon compound (usually
malate)
Step 3: Mesophyll cells then export the four-carbon
products (i.e. malate) through plasmodesmata to bundle-sheath cells
o In the bundle-sheath cells,
the four carbon compounds release CO2 which is then fixed by rubisco
in the Calvin cycle
o Mesophyll cells thus pump CO2
into bundle-sheath cells, minimizing photorespiration and enhancing sugar
production by maintaining a CO2 concentration sufficient for rubisco
to accept CO2 rather than oxygen
C.
CAM Plants
A second photosynthetic adaptation exists in
succulent plants adapted to very arid conditions. These plants open their stomata primarily at night and close them
during the day (opposite of most plants)
o This conserves water during
the day, but prevents CO2 from entering the leaves
o When stomata are open at
night, CO2 is taken up and incorporated into a variety of organic
acids. This mode of carbon fixation is
called crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM)
o The organic acids made at
night are stored in vacuoles of mesophyll cells until morning, when the stomata
close
o During daytime, light
reactions supply ATP and NADPH for the Calvin cycle. At this time, CO2 is released from the organic acids
made previous night and is incorporated into sugar in the chloroplasts
The CAM and C4 pathways:
o Are similar in that CO2
is first incorporated into organic intermediates before it enters the Calvin
cycle
o Differ in that the initial
steps of carbon fixation in C4 plants are structurally separate from
the Calvin cycle; in CAM plants, the two steps occur at separate times
Regardless of whether the plant uses a C3,
C4, or CAM pathway, all plants use the Calvin cycle to produce sugar
form CO2
VIII. Photosynthesis is the
biosphere’s metabolic foundation: a
review
On a global scale, photosynthesis makes about 160
billion metric tons of carbohydrate per year.
No other chemical process on Earth is more productive or is as important
to life
o Light reactions capture
solar energy and use it to:
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Produce
ATP
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Transfer
electrons from water to NADP+ to form NADPH
o The Calvin cycle uses ATP
and NADPH to fix CO2 and produce sugar
Photosynthesis transforms light energy to chemical
bond energy in sugar molecules
o Sugars made in chloroplasts
supply the entire plant with chemical energy and carbon skeletons to synthesize
organic molecules
o Nonphotosynthetic parts of a
plant depends on organic molecules exported from leaves in veins
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The
disaccharide sucrose is the transport form of carbohydrate in most plants
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Sucrose
is the raw material for cellular respiration and many anabolic pathways in nonphotosynthetic
cells
o Much of the sugar is
glucose- the monomer linked to form cellulose, the main constituent of plant
cell walls
Most plants make more organic material than needed
for respiratory fuel and for precursors of biosynthesis.
o Plants consume about 50% of
the photosynthate as fuel for cellular respiration
o Extra sugars are synthesized
into starch and stored in storage cells of roots, tubers, seeds, and fruits
o Heterotrophs also consume
parts of plants as food
Photorespiration can reduce photosynthetic yield in
hot dry climates. Alternate methods of
carbon fixation minimize photorespiration.
o C4 plants
spatially separate carbon fixation from the Calvin cycle
o CAM plants temporally
separate carbon fixation form the Calvin cycle