Title: Introductory Questions
1Introductory Questions 8
- Where is the Casparian strip located?
- Why must plants use active transport in order to
take in ions into the root hair cells? - Name the two types of cells that make up the
mesophyll layers in a leaf. What kind of tissue
(cell types) are they? - Briefly explain how the stomata open and close.
Name the ions involved. What color light cause
the stomata to open? - Name three factors that can affect transpiration
in plants.
2Introductory Questions 10
- Name the three parts that make up a photosystem.
- How does NADPH differ from NADH?
- What does it mean when we FIX carbon? Does this
happen in the light or dark reactions? - What is required in order for the light reactions
to proceed? - How does non-cyclic photophosphorylation differ
from cyclic photophosphorylation? Which process
is more common?
3Introductory Questions 11
- Name the three phases of the Calvin Cycle. Which
phases require ATP and how much ATP would be
needed for producing on glucose molecule? - 2) What are the substrates that attach to the
active sites of Rubisco? - How does a C3 plant differ from a C4 plant? Give
3 examples of a C3 C4 plant. - What happens as a result of stomata closing?
- Which type of plant undergoes photorespiration?
Does photorespiration occur at night or during
the day? How is photorespiration different from
cellular respiration seen in the mitochondria? - How are C4 and CAM plants similar and how are
they different? Give an example of both.
4Chapter 10
- Chapter 10
- Photosynthesis
- The conversion of radiant energy into chemical
energy -
- Converting inorganic matter into organic matter
5Overview of Chapter 10
- Autotrophs vs. Hetertrophs
- Properties and Characteristics of Light
- Chloroplast Structure Function Key Pigments
Chlorophyll a b, Carotenoids - Light Reactions (Light Dependent)-Photosystems
- Cyclic vs. Non-cyclic flow of Electrons
- Dark Reactions (Light independent)-Calvin Cycle
- Photorespiration ? Photosynthetic efficiency
- C3, C4, and CAM Metabolic Pathways of Plants
6Photosynthesis in Nature
- Autotrophs are biotic Producers
- Ex. Photoautotrophs and chemoautotrophs
obtains organic food without eating other
organisms - Heterotrophs are biotic Consumers obtains
organic food by eating other organisms or their
by-products (includes decomposers)
7Properties of Light
- Electromagnetic Radiation
- Possesses properties of a particle and a wave
- Generated when electrons move from a high energy
state to a lower energy state. - Small portion of the EM spectrum (pg .157)
- Composed of small packets or quantized amount
of energy called PHOTONS - Described by Max Plank and DeBroglie
8Visible Light
- Wavelength range of 380 nm 760 nm
- Colors include
- R O Y G B I V
- Red Lowest energy, Longest wavelength
- Violet Highest energy, smallest wavelength
9Properties of Light (Pg. 186)
10Photons and Electrons
- Photons interact with electrons and move
electrons to higher energy levels from the
ground state - When electrons fall to the lower ground state,
and light is emitted as it falls. This light is
called Fluorescence.
11Leaves The Solar Collectors for Plants
- Considered to be an organ of the plant
- Site for Photosynthesis (lots of chloroplasts)
- Cutin-thin wax layer helps to reduce or control
water loss - Other features worth noting
- -Upper Lower epidermis
- -Stomata Guard cells
- -Xylem Phloem (vascular bundle sheaths)
- -Palisade spongy Mesophyll
- -Trichomes
- High surface area Can cause water to be lost
- See a definite trade off
12Cell Layers Observed in Leaves
13The Chloroplast and Light (pg. 186)
- The (3) Fates of Light as it interacts with a
chloroplast.
14Introductory Questions 9
- How is an autotroph different from a heterotroph?
- Briefly explain what light is and how it is
generated. - In plant tissue, where are chloroplasts highly
concentrated? - 4) How are chloroplasts similar to mitochondria?
How are they different? - 5) How do plants absorb light energy? Name some
features that allow plants to absorb light. What
are some differences between chlorophyll a and
chlorophyll b? - What did Engelmanns experiment measure? What
organisms did he use? - Which reactant does the oxygen produced from
photosynthesis directly come from? - Where specifically do the light and dark reaction
take place within a plant cell?
15Overview of Chapter 10
- Autotrophs vs. Hetertrophs
- Properties and Characteristics of Light
- Chloroplast Structure Function Key Pigments
Chlorophyll a b, Carotenoids - Light Reactions (Light Dependent)-Photosystems
- Cyclic vs. Non-cyclic flow of Electrons
- --------------------------------------------------
----------------------------- - Dark Reactions (Light independent)-Calvin Cycle
- Photorespiration ? Photosynthetic efficiency
- C3, C4, and CAM Metabolic Pathways of Plants
16The Leaf The Site for Photosynthesis
17Structure of the Chloroplast
- Double membrane
- Has its own DNA
- Internal membrane system called Thylakoids
- Contains protein pigmets ex chlorophyll a
18Typical Pigments Found in the Thylakoid Membrane
- Chlorophyll a - important in light reactions
- Chlorophyll b - accessory pigment
- - has a yellow/green reflection
- Carotenoids are yellow orange
- Anthocyanins are red pigments
- Fucoxanthin is a brown pigment
- Xanthophylls are typically yellow
19The Chlorophyll Molecule (Pg. 188)
- Porphyrin ring
- (absorbs light)
- Central Magnesium Atom
- Hydrocarbon tail
- Alternating double single bonds
- Similar to hemoglobin
- History of Discovering Chlorophyll
http//www.chm.bris.ac.uk/motm/chlorophyll/chlorop
hyll_h.htm
20Determining Absorbance of a Pigment (pg. 187)
21Absorption Action Spectra (pg. 187)
22Engelmanns Experiment (pg. 187)
- Obtained the first action spectrum in 1883
- Used Spirogyra w/spiral shaped chloroplasts
- Exposed this alga to a color spectrum using a
prism - Measured photosynthesis by using certain motile
bacteria that would be attracted to the oxygen
released by photosynthesis. - Control Ensure that the bacteria were not
attracted to the colors, he conducted the
experiment without spirogyra. No preference was
shown by the bacteria.
23Discovering the Process of Photosynthesis
- For centuries gardeners have asked the perplexing
question - Where does the mass of a tree that weighs
several tons come from when it starts as a
seedling weighing only a few grams? - Does it come from
- -Soil
- -air
- -water
-
24Experiments conducted probing this Question
- Jan Van Helmont - accounted for the water
(hydrate) aspect of photosynthesis - Joseph Priestly accounted for the release of
oxygen by photosynthesis using a a burning
candle, glass jar and a mint leaf. - Jan Ingenhousz same as Priestly except showed
that light was required.
25Photosynthesis Equation
26Photosynthesis-Chemical Equation
- Reactants carbon dioxide water
- Products Glucose and oxygen gas
- Also Light energy, enzymes, pigments
27Another Perplexing Question about Photosynthesis
- Where does the oxygen released by photosynthesis
come from directly? Does it come from the carbon
dioxide or water? - First challenged by Challenged by C.B. Van Niel
using photosynthetic bacteria which showed that
CO2 is not split. - Isotopic Oxygen (18O) was used to trace and track
the fate of oxygen.
28Tracking the Fate of Isotopic Oxygen
29Photosynthesis an overview
- Redox process
- H2O is split into
- 2e- and 4 H
- The Hs are transferred to CO2 and a sugar is
produced (CH2O) -
- 2 Major steps to Photosynthesis
- Light Reactions (photo)
- -occurs in the thylakoids
- Dark Reactions
- -Also called Carbon fixation
- -occurs in the stroma
- -Involves the Calvin Cycle
30Photosynthesis an overview
31A Photosystem
- Light Harvesting Pigments
- Have antennae pigments complexes
- (200-300 pigment molecules)
- Chlorophyll a and chlorophyll b are present
- Chlorophyll a Reaction Center
- Primary Electron Acceptor will receive the
electron (reduced) and chlorophyll a will be
oxidized and lose the electron.
32Structure of a Photosystem
- Light harvesting units of the thylakoid membrane
- Composed mainly of protein and pigment antenna
complexes - Antenna pigment molecules are struck by photons
- Energy is passed to reaction centers (redox
location) - Excited e- from chlorophyll is trapped by a
primary e- acceptor
33Photosystems in the Thylakoid Membrane
34Mechanical view of Photosynthesis
35Noncyclic Electron Flow
- Most common light reaction pathway
- Involves (2) Photosystems
- Photosystem II (P680)
- Photosystem I (P700)
- Exhibits A Z scheme or Zig-Zag flow of
electrons - Electrons flow in one direction
- ATP and NADPH are produced
- Electrons do not cycle back to the ground state
to chlorophyll.
36Photosystems in the Thylakoid Membrane
37Noncyclic Electron Flow
38Build up of Hydrogen ions in the thylakoid space
39Cyclic Flow of Electrons
- Utilizes Photosystem I (P700) only
- Electrons cycle back to chlorophyll
- NADPH is not produced.
- Helps to produce more ATP that is used in the
Calvin Cycle - Stimulated by the accumulation of NADPH
40Cyclic Electron flow
- Alternative cycle when ATP is deficient
- Photosystem I used but not II produces ATP but
no NADPH - Why? The Calvin cycle consumes more ATP than
NADPH. - Cyclic photophosphorylation
- Review of Light reactions
- http//web.mit.edu/esgbio/www/ps/light.html
41Cyclic Electron flow
42Photosynthesis-Light Dark Reactions
43The Calvin Cycle-C3 pathway
- 3 molecules of CO2 are fixed into
glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate (G3P) - 3 Phases
- 1- Carbon fixation
- Each CO2 is attached to RuBP (rubisco enzyme)
- 2- Reduction
- electrons from NADPH reduces to G3P ATP used up
- 3- Regeneration
- G3P rearranged to RuBP ATP used cycle
continues
44The Calvin Cycle-C3 pathway
45Calvin Cycle First Phase
- Carbon Fixation
- (1 carbon) (5 carbon) (3 carbon)
- CO2 Ribulose Bisphosphate (RuBP) ?2
Phosphoglycerate (PGA) - w/ help of RUBISCO
- (Ribulose Bisphosphate Carboxylase)-most abundant
protein on earth - Carbon is converted from an inorganic form into
an organic form and thereby FIXED. - A Total of Six carbons must be fixed for one
glucose molecule or some other hexose.
46Calvin Cycle Second Phase
- Reduction Phase
- Phosphoglycerate (PGA)
- ? is phosphorylated (use ATP)
- 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate
- ? Redox Rxn w/NADPH
- Glyceraldehyde-3-Phosphate (G3P)
- G3P is a sugar also seen in glycolysis
- For every 3 CO2 ? 6 G3P is produced but only ONE
can be counted as a gain in carbohydrate and can
exit the cycle.
47Calvin Cycle Third Phase
- Regeneration of RUBP
- 5 G3P are phosphorylated ? 3 RuBP
- 3 ATPs are used to do the chemical rearrangement
- RuBP can now accept more CO2 molecules
48Calvin Cycle - Net Synthesis
- For every G3P molecule produced
- 3 CO2 are brought in
- 9 ATPs are consumed
- 6 NADPH are used
- G3P can then be used by the plant to make
glucose and other organic compounds - Website for review of the Calvin Cycle
http//web.mit.edu/esgbio/www/ps/dark.html
49To Make a Six Carbon Molecule You need
- 6 CO2 molecules (6 carbons)
- 6 molecules of RuBP (30 carbons)
- (remain in the cycle from TEN G3Ps)
- 18 ATP molecules
- -Produced-
- 12 molecules of PGA (36 carbons)
- 2 molecules of G3P (6 carbons)
50C3 Metabolic Pathway in Plants
- CO2 enters directly into the Calvin Cycle
- The first organic compound made is a 3 carbon
molecule called PGA (phosphoglycerate) - Close their stomata on hot, dry days to conserve
water. - Photorespiration occurs typically in these
plants. - Examples include Rice, Wheat, and Soybeans.
51Photorespiration
- Observed in C3 plants when stomata are closed
during hot, dry days - CO2 levels ? O2 levels ?
- Rubisco binds with O2 instead of CO2
- Drains the Calvin cycle (? photosynthetic output)
- No ATP is produced
- No food molecules (G3P) are made
- Thought to be an evolutionary relic (Rubiscos
affintiy for O2 remains) - Considered to be wasteful and no benefit known
- TWO Adaptations have emerged to minimize
photorespiration They are observed in the C4 and
CAM plants
52C4 Metaboic Pathway in Plants
- CO2 and PEP (phosphoenolpyruvate) combine to
produce a 4-Carbon compound called
Oxaloacetate - Unique anatomy is present w/Bundle Sheath cells
that are photosynthetic surrounding the veins of
the leaf. - Calvin cycle is confined to the chloroplasts
within the bundle sheath cells. - PEP carboxylase is used intially instead of
Rubisco (higher affinity for CO2) - A high CO2 concentration is maintained for the
Calvin cycle which minimizes photorespiration. - CO2 is continually fed into the Calvin cycle from
the mesophyll cells even when the stomata are
closed. - Examples include Corn Sugarcane
53Cell Layers Observed in Leaves
54Unique Anatomy of C4 Plants
55CAM Plants
- CAM Crassulacean Acid Metabolism
- Adapted in arid environments
- Close their stomata during the day and open them
only at night. (reverse of typical plants) - Organic compounds made are stored at night in
their vacuoles when the stomata are open then
used later during the day. - Common in succulent plants such as ice plants,
pineapple and cacti.
56Comparing CAM and C4 Plants
57A Review of Photosynthesis
58Review of Key PointsPhotons ? Food
- Light Reactions ? ATP and NADPH
- Calvin Cycle ? Sugar Fixes CO2
- The sugar produced supplies the plant w/chemical
energy carbon skeletons needed for other
cellular parts. - 50 of the sugar produced is used for cellular
respiration in the plants mitochondria. - Typically, plants produce more organic material
than they need and store it away as starch.
59Content Breakdown for Test 1
- Topic Questions
- Chapter 20 Origin of the Earth 4
- Chapter 26 Bryophytes Ferns 4
- Chapter 27 Gynosperms Angiosperms 4
- Chapter 35 Lifecycle of Angiosperms Fruit 8
- Chapter 36 Hormonal responses 3
- Chapter 31 Tissues 4
- Chapter 33 Stems 8
- Chapter 34 Roots 10
- Chapter 32 Leaves 8
- Chapter 8 Photosynthesis 12
- Cumulative (1st Semester content) 10
60Controlling Stomata Activity
- Typically open during the day and closed at night
(except in CAM plants) for CO2 - Two Guard Cells that surround the opening change
their shape when H2O enters and leaves.
(osmotically) - Yellow pigments are thought be abundant in the
guard cells which absorb Blue light. - Uptake of potassium chloride ions OPENS the
stomata - (driven by actively transporting H ions out
of guard cells) - Decrease in sucrose concentration CLOSES the
stomata - Low CO2 stomata open High CO2 Stomata close
- Dehydration
- Circadian rhythms also contribute
61Transpiration in Plants
- Loss of water by evaporation
- Cuticle helps to reduce this loss (1-3)
- Occurs mostly through open stomata
- Light, higher temperatures, wind, and dry air all
increase transpiration - Decreased by high humidity
- Can prevent plants from overheating
- Responsible for water movement in plants (to
leaves) - Distributes minerals throughout the plant
- Important part of the hydrologic cycle
62Review of Key PointsPhotons ? Food
- Light Reactions ? ATP and NADPH
- Calvin Cycle ? Sugar Fixes CO2
- The sugar produced supplies the plant w/chemical
energy carbon skeletons needed for other
cellular parts. - 50 of the sugar produced is used for cellular
respiration in the plants mitochondria. - Typically, plants produce more organic material
than they need and store it away as starch.
63Stomata Opening and Closing
64Controlling Stomata Activity
- Typically open during the day and closed at night
(except in CAM plants) for CO2 - Two Guard Cells that surround the opening change
their shape when H2O enters and leaves.
(osmotically) - Yellow pigments are thought be abundant in the
guard cells which absorb Blue light. - Uptake of potassium chloride ions OPENS the
stomata - (driven by actively transporting H ions out
of guard cells) - Decrease in sucrose concentration CLOSES the
stomata - Low CO2 stomata open High CO2 Stomata close
- Dehydration
- Circadian rhythms also contribute
65Transpiration in Plants
- Loss of water by evaporation
- Cuticle helps to reduce this loss (1-3)
- Occurs mostly through open stomata
- Light, higher temperatures, wind, and dry air all
increase transpiration - Decreased by high humidity
- Can prevent plants from overheating
- Responsible for water movement in plants (to
leaves) - Distributes minerals throughout the plant
- Important part of the hydrologic cycle
66Leaf Morphology
67Leaf Morphology-Chapter 32
- Leaves can be used to identify different species
of plants. - (3) Characteristics are used
- Simple vs. Compound Leaves (Pinnate or Palmate)
- Leaf arrangement on the stem
- (alternate, whorled, or opposite)
- Venation Pattern (parallel, branched)