Title: What is Photosynthesis
1CAN YOU EXPLAIN THE
IMPORTANCE OF THE COLOR AND
SHAPE OF LEAVES?
2Photosynthesis
- What Is Photosynthesis?
- Light-Dependent Reactions How Is Light Energy
Converted to Chemical Energy? - Light-Independent Reactions How Is Chemical
Energy Stored in Glucose Molecules? - What Is the Relationship Between Light-Dependent
and Light-Independent Reactions? - Water, CO2, and the C4 Pathway
3The Photosynthetic Equation
6CO2 carbon dioxide
6H20 water
light energy ? sunlight
C6H12O6 glucose (sugar)
6O2 oxygen
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5Cycling of Gases, Sugar, and Water in Mesophyll
Cells
- Production of carbon compounds like glucose
(photosynthesis) is linked with energy extraction
(in cellular respiration) - Water, CO2, sugar, and O2 cycle between the two
processes
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7Leaf Anatomy
- Flattened leaf shape exposes large surface area
to catch sunlight - Upper and lower leaf surfaces of a leaf comprise
the epidermis - Waxy, waterproof cuticle on outer surfaces
reduces water evaporation
8Leaf Anatomy
- Adjustable pores called stomata allow for entry
of air with CO2 - Inner mesophyll cell layers contain majority of
chloroplasts - Vascular bundles (veins) supply water and
minerals to the leaf while carrying sugars away
from the leaf
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10Anatomy of a Chloroplast
- Mesophyll cells have 40-200 chloroplasts each
- Chloroplasts are bounded by a double outer
membrane composed of the inner and outer membranes
11Anatomy of a Chloroplast
- The stroma is the semi-fluid medium within the
inner membrane - Disk-shaped sacs called thylakoids found within
the stroma in stacks called grana
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13Location of Photosynthetic Reactions
- The two chemical reactions of photosynthesis are
localized - The conversion of sunlight energy to chemical
energy (light-dependent reactions) occurs within
the thylakoid membranes - The synthesis of glucose and other molecules
(light-independent reactions) occurs in the
surrounding stroma
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15Photosynthesis Composed of Two Groups of Reactions
- Light Dependent Reactions
- Chlorophyll and other molecules of the thylakoids
capture sunlight energy - Sunlight energy is converted to the energy
carrier molecules ATP and NADPH - Oxygen gas is releases as a by-product
16Photosynthesis Composed of Two Groups of Reactions
- Light Independent Reactions
- Enzymes in the stroma synthesize glucose and
other organic molecules using the chemical energy
stored in ATP and NADPH
17Cycling of Energy Molecules in Photosynthesis
18Light-Dependent Reactions How Is Light Energy
Converted to Chemical Energy?
- During Photosynthesis, Light Is First Captured by
Pigments in Chloroplasts - The Light-Dependent Reactions Occur Within the
Thylakoid Membranes - Photosystem II Generates ATP
- Photosystem I Generates NADPH
- Splitting Water Maintains the Flow of Electrons
Through the Photosystems
19Light Dependent Reactions
- Captured sunlight energy is stored as chemical
energy in two carrier molecules - Adenosine triphosphate (ATP)
- Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate
(NADPH)
20The Energy in Visible Light
- Sunlight radiates electromagnetic energy
- Visible light is radiation falling between
400-750 nanometers of wavelength
21The Energy in Visible Light
- Packets of energy called photons different in
energy level - Short-wavelength photons are very energetic
- Longer-wavelength photons have lower energies
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23Visible Light Stimulates Pigment Molecules
- Action of light-capturing pigments
- Absorption of certain wavelengths (light is
trapped) - Reflection of certain wavelengths (light bounces
back) - Transmission of certain wavelengths (light passes
through)
24Visible Light Stimulates Pigment Molecules
- Absorbed light drives biological processes when
it is converted to chemical energy - Common pigments found in chloroplasts include
- Chlorophyll a and b
- Accessory pigments such as carotenoids
25Chlorophylls
- Chlorophyll a and b absorb violet, blue, and red
light but reflect green light (hence they appear
green)
26WHY ARE THESE LEAVES GREEN?
- they contain chlorophyll a and b
- Chlorophylls absorb violet, blue, and red light
- Chlorophylls reflect green light
27Carotenoids
- absorb blue and green light but reflect yellow,
orange, or red (hence they appear yellow-orange) - Beta-carotene is a carotenoid that produces the
orange color of vegetables such as carrots - Beta-carotene is the principle source of vitamin
A for animals and is used in capturing light in
our eyes
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30Why Autumn Leaves Turn Yellow and Red
- Both chlorophylls and carotenoids are present in
leaves - Chlorophyll breaks down before carotenoids in
dying autumn leaves revealing yellow colors - Red fall colors (anthocyanin pigments) are
synthesized by some autumn leaves, producing red
colors
31Light Dependent Reactions in Thylakoids
- Photosystems within thylakoids
- Photosystems are assemblies of proteins,
chlorophyll, accessory pigments - Two Photosystems (PSI and PSII) in thylakoids
- Each Photosystem is associated with a chain of
electron carriers
32WHAT DO PLANTS USE THESE PIGMENTS FOR??
- Chlorophylls absorb light and generate high
energy electrons - Carotenoids are absorb light energy and transfers
it to chlorophylls (think of them as antennae) - Chlorophylls and carotenoids are organized into
photosystems
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34Overview of the Light Dependent Reactions
- Accessory pigments in Photosystems absorb light
and pass energy to reaction centers containing
chlorophyll - Reaction centers receive energized electrons
- Energized electrons then passed down a series of
electron carrier molecules (Electron Transport
Chain)
35Overview of the Light Dependent Reactions
- In Photosystem II the energy released from passed
electrons used to synthesize ATP from ADP and
phosphate - In Photosystem Ithe energized electrons make
NADPH from NADP and H
36Why do plants need water for photosynthesis?
- The two electrons that Photosystem II boosts to
the ETS that drives ATP synthesis are generated
by splitting water - The H required for NADPH synthesis by the ETS
after Photosystem I is generated by splitting
water
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38Q What left after the hydrogen and electrons
are stripped from water? A you are right, oxygen
39Time to Make Sugar.The Light-Independent
Reactions
-
- How Is Chemical Energy Stored in Glucose
Molecules? - The C3 Cycle Captures Carbon Dioxide
- Carbon Fixed During the C3 Cycle Is Used to
Synthesize Glucose
40Light Independent Reactions
- NADPH and ATP from light-dependent reactions used
to power glucose synthesis - Light not directly necessary for
light-independent reactions if ATP NADPH
available - Light-independent reactions called the
Calvin-Benson Cycle or C3 Cycle
41Overview of the C3 Cycle
- 6 CO2 used to synthesize 1 glucose (C6H12O6)
- Carbon dioxide is captured and linked to
ribulose bisphosphate (RuBP) - ATP and NADPH from light dependent reactions used
to power C3 reactions
42C3 cycle
43C3 Cycle Has Three Parts
- Carbon fixation (carbon capture)
- 6 Ribulose bisphosphate (RuBP) molecules combine
with 6CO2 - Fixation step and subsequent reactions yield
twelve 3-carbon phosphoglyceric acid (PGA)
molecules
44C3 Cycle Has Three Parts
- Synthesis of Glyceraldehyde 3-Phosphate (G3P)
- Energy is donated by ATP and NADPH
- Phosphoglyceric acid (PGA) molecules are
converted into glyceraldehyde 3-Phophate (G3P)
molecules
45C3 Cycle Has Three Parts
- Regeneration of Ribulose bis-phosphate (RuBP)
- 10 of 12 G3P molecules converted into 6 RuBP
molecules - 2 of 12 G3P molecules used to synthesize 1
glucose - ATP energy used for these reactions
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47Fixed Is Carbon Incorporated into Glucose
- One cycle of the C3 Cycle produce two left over
G3P molecules - Two G3P molecules (3 carbons each) used to form 1
glucose (6 carbons) - Glucose may later be broken down during cellular
respiration or stored in chains as starch
48Summary of Photosynthesis
49Limiting Resources?
- Plants do not always have all of the water and
carbon dioxide they need - Plants have evolved both anatomy and biochemical
pathways to cope with environmental conditions - Minimizing photorespiration is a selective
pressure in plant evolution
50Water, CO2, and the C4 Pathway
- The Ideal Leaf
- Ideal leaves have large surface area to intercept
sunlight - Ideal leaves are very porous to allow for CO2
entry from air
51Water, CO2, and the C4 Pathway
- Problem Substantial leaf porosity leads to
substantial water evaporation, causing
dehydration stress on the plant - Plants evolved waterproof coating and adjustable
pores (stomata) for CO2 entry
52Photorespiration Occurs When Stomata Are Closed
- When stomata close, CO2 levels drop and O2 levels
rise - Carbon fixing enzyme combines O2 instead of CO2
with RuBP (called photorespiration)
53Photorespiration is bad
- Photorespiration
- O2 is used up as CO2 is generated
- No useful cellular energy made
- No glucose produced
- Photorespiration is unproductive and wasteful
54Conditions Causing Photorespiration
- Hot, dry weather causes stomata to stay closed
- Oxygen levels rise as carbon dioxide levels fall
inside leaf - Photorespiration very common under such
conditions - Plants may die from lack of glucose synthesis
55C4 Plants Reduce Photorespiration
- C4 plants have chloroplasts in bundle sheath
cells as well as mesophyll cells - Bundle sheath cells surround vascular bundles
deep within mesophyll - C3 plants lack bundle-sheath cell chloroplasts
- C4 plants utilize the C4 pathway
- Two-stage carbon fixation pathway
56The C4 Pathway
- Outer mesophyll cells contain phosphoenolpyruvate
(PEP) instead of RuBP - Carbon dioxide specific enzyme links CO2 with PEP
(unaffected by high O2) - 4 carbon molecule then shuttled from mesophyll to
bundle sheath cells...
57The C4 Pathway
- CO2 released in bundle sheath cells, building up
high CO2 concentration - CO2 in bundle sheath cells fixed by standard C3
pathway - 3 carbon shuttle molecule returns to mesophyll
cells
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60Where do C4 plants live?
- C4 pathway uses up more energy than C3 pathway
- C4 plants thrive when light is abundant but water
is scare (deserts and hot climates) - C4 plant examples corn, sugarcane, sorghum,
crabgrass, some thistles
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62C3 and C4 Plants Adapted to Different
Environmental Conditions
- C3 plants thrive where water is abundant or if
light levels are low (cool, wet, and cloudy
climates) - C3 plant examples most trees, wheat, oats, rice,
Kentucky bluegrass
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