Ch. 8 Photosynthesis F17
Ch. 8 Photosynthesis F17
Ch. 8 Photosynthesis F17
Thylakoid space
Sites of Photosynthesis
• mesophyll: chloroplasts
mainly found in these cells
of leaf
• stomata: pores in leaf (CO2
enter/O2 exits)
• chlorophyll: green pigment
in thylakoid membranes of
chloroplasts
6CO2 + 6H2O + Light Energy C6H12O6 + 6O2
Redox Reaction:
water is split e- transferred with H+ to CO2 sugar
Remember: OILRIG
Oxidation: lose e-
Reduction: gain e-
Evidencethat chloroplasts split water molecules
enabled researchers to track atoms through
photosynthesis (C.B. van Niel)
Three phases:
1. Carbon fixation
2. Reduction
3. Regeneration of RuBP (CO2 acceptor)
Phase 1: 3 CO2 + RuBP (5-C sugar ribulose
bisphosphate)
• Catalyzed by enzyme rubisco (RuBP carboxylase)
Phase 2: Use 6 ATP
and 6 NADPH to
produce 1 net G3P
Phase 3: Use 3 ATP to
regenerate RuBP
1. (See Figure 10.17) What are the 3
locations that H+ is used to create the
proton gradient?
2. What purpose does cyclic e- flow serve?
3. What is the main function of the Calvin
Cycle? Where does it occur?
4. What are the reactants of the Calvin
cycle? What are the products?
5. Which enzyme is responsible for carbon
fixation?
Photorespiration
Metabolic pathway which:
• Uses O2 & produces CO2
• Uses ATP
• No sugar production (rubisco binds O2
breakdown of RuBP)
Occurs on hot, dry bright days when stomata close
(conserve H2O)
Why? Early atmosphere: low O2, high CO2?
1. Problem with C3 Plants:
• CO2 fixed to 3-C compound in Calvin cycle
• Ex. Rice, wheat, soybeans
• Hot, dry days:
partially close stomata, ↓CO2
Photorespiration
↓ photosynthetic output (no sugars made)
2. C4 Plants:
• CO2 fixed to 4-C compound
• Ex. corn, sugarcane, grass
• Hot, dry days stomata close
2 cell types = mesophyll & bundle sheath
cells
mesophyll : PEP carboxylase fixes CO2
(4-C), pump CO2 to bundle sheath
bundle sheath: CO2 used in Calvin cycle
• ↓photorespiration, ↑sugar production
• WHY? Advantage in hot, sunny areas
C4 Leaf Anatomy
3. CAM Plants:
• Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM)
• NIGHT: stomata open CO2 enters
converts to organic acid, stored in mesophyll
cells
• DAY: stomata closed light reactions supply
ATP, NADPH; CO2 released from organic
acids for Calvin cycle
• Ex. cacti, pineapples, succulent (H2O-storing)
plants
• WHY? Advantage in arid conditions
1. Draw a T-Chart. Compare/contrast Light
Reactions vs. Calvin Cycle.
2. What is photorespiration? How does it affect C3
plants?
3. In lab notebook: Graph data from yesterday’s
lab. Determine the ET50 for the “With CO2” test
group.
4. In lab notebook: Brainstorm at list of possible
factors that could affect the rate of
photosynthesis. (Think of factors you could test
with the leaf disk technique.)
C3 C4 CAM
• O2 Production
Global: • Food source
Photosynthesis Calvin
involves both
Light Cycle
Light
ENERGY Reaction
stored in in which CO2 fixed
organic energized to RuBP
H2O
molecules split electrons
Reduce
NADP+ to
C3
ETC NADPH phosphorylated
O2 and reduced
evolved
to form
regenerate
ATP G3P
chemiosmosis using RuBP
in process
called glucose &
photophosphorylation other
carbs
LIGHT REACTIONS CALVIN CYCLE
MITOCHONDRIA chloroplast
RESPIRATION PHOTOSYNTHESIS
Plants + Animals Plants
Needs O2 and food Needs CO2, H2O, sunlight
Produces CO2, H2O and Produces glucose, O2 and
ATP, NADH ATP, NADPH
Occurs in mitochondria Occurs in chloroplast thylakoid
membrane & matrix membrane & stroma
Oxidative phosphorylation Photorespiration
Proton gradient across Proton gradient across
membrane membrane