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PHOTOSYNTHESIS

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PHOTOSYNTHESIS Harnessing Energy Indirect factors Water Required in photosynthesis Only 1% of water passing up the xylem is used in photosynthesis. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PHOTOSYNTHESIS


1
PHOTOSYNTHESIS
  • Harnessing Energy

2
Heterotrophs and Autotrophs
  • All living organisms require organic compounds
    and energy for their cells.
  • Depending on how organisms obtain these compounds
    and energy, we classify them as being
  • heterotrophic (other feeding)
  • or autotrophic (self-feeding).

3
Heterotrophs and Autotrophs
  • Heterotrophic organisms such as animals, fungi
    and many bacteria must consume food which
    provides organic compounds and energy for their
    cells.
  • These heterotrophic organisms either ingest or
    absorb the organic matter of other living or dead
    organisms or their products.
  • Autotrophic organisms such as plants, algae and
    several kinds of bacteria use do not ingest or
    absorb organic compounds.
  • Autotrophic organisms use an external energy
    source to build organic compounds from simple
    inorganic compounds.
  • Two different processes for trapping energy and
    creating organic matter from inorganic matter.
    These are chemosynthesis and photosynthesis.

4
Chemosynthesis
  • Chemosynthetic organisms use the chemical energy
    within inorganic molecules.
  • This energy comes from oxidising reactions.
  • These reactions involve the addition of oxygen to
    (or the removal of electrons from) a substance.
  • Examples include bacteria who obtain energy by
    converting
  • Ammonium ions (NH4) to nitrite ions (NO2-)
  • Nitrite (NO2-) ions to nitrate (NO3-)
  • Sulfide ions (S2-) to sulfate ions (SO42-)
  • Whole communities of heterotrophic organisms live
    around volcanic vents on the deep ocean floors
    where light does not penetrate. They rely
    directly or indirectly on chemosynthetic bacteria
    for their food supply in much the same way as
    terrestrial communities depend on plants to trap
    energy.

5
Photosynthesis
  • Organisms such as plants, algae and some protists
    (such as phytoplankton) are able to trap light
    energy and make organic compounds, such as
    sugars, from simple compounds such as carbon
    dioxide and water.
  • Photosynthesis is the process in which light
    energy is transformed into chemical energy stored
    in sugars.
  • Organisms with this ability are termed producers.
  • Other organisms, such as animals and fungi, that
    depend, directly or indirectly, on the organic
    compounds produced by producers, are called
    consumers.

6
Photosynthesis
  • In a typical producer, such as a terrestrial
    flowering plant, the complex series of reactions
    in photosynthesis can be summarised as follows
  • carbon dioxide water ---------------------------
    gt glucose water oxygen
  • 6CO2 12H2O ----------------------
    ----gt C6H12O 6H2O 6O2

light
chlorophyll
light
chlorophyll
7
Where does photosynthesis occur?
  • In a terrestrial flowering plant, only some cells
    are able to carry out photo synthesis and these
    are principally located in green leaves.
  • The shape and structure of leaves equips them to
    carry out photosynthesis.

8
Why are leaves so special?
  • Their flat shape provides a large surface area
    exposed to sunlight.
  • The presence of many stomata (pores) on one or
    both leaf surfaces provides access into the leaf
    for carbon dioxide.
  • The thinness and the presence of internal air
    spaces in the leaves enables the ready diffusion
    of carbon dioxide to photosynthetic cells in the
    leaf tissue.
  • The network of xylem vessels in the vascular
    tissue transports water to the photosynthetic
    cells.
  • Each photosynthetic cell possesses many
    chloroplasts enabling it to trap the energy of
    sunlight.

9
Chloroplasts
  • Present in some cells of plants and algae.
  • The boundary of each chloroplast is a double
    membrane (inner and outer).
  • The inner membrane extends to form a system of
    membranous sacs called lamella or thylakoids.
  • When several of these stack together they form
    grana.
  • Chlorophyll is located in the grana.
  • The semi-fluid substance between the grana is
    called the stroma.

10
Chlorophyll
  • Chlorophyll is pigment that absorbs or traps
    light.
  • There are three types of chlorophyll a, b and
    c.
  • Chlorophyll a is the major photosynthetic pigment
    and is found in all photosynthetic plants,
    protists, and cyanobacteria.
  • Chlorophyll molecules are embedded in the
    membrane structure of grana.
  • Chlorophylls absorb wavelengths of violet-to-blue
    and red light. They reflect green which is why
    leaves appear green.

11
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12
Carotenoids
  • Carotenoids are accessory pigments found in all
    green plants.
  • They absorb blue and green wavelengths and give a
    plant a yellow or orange color.
  • In the autumn when chlorophyll breaks down, it is
    the accessory pigments which are responsible for
    the colour.
  • Accessory pigments are better at absorbing light
    at different wavelengths to chlorophyll a. They
    do not retain energy, but transfer it to
    chlorophyll a to enhance its effectiveness.
  • NB The red color of some autumn leaves is due to
    the anthocyanin pigments. These are not
    photosynthetic.

13
Stages of Photosynthesis
  • Photosynthesis from
  • photo light
  • synthesis put together
  • The name reflects the two-stage nature of the
    process.
  • Light-dependent stage involving trapping of light
    energy
  • Light-independent stage in which energy trapped
    in the first stage is used to make organic
    compounds from carbon dioxide and water.

14
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15
Light-dependent Reaction
  • Also known as the light reaction.
  • Occur within the grana of the chloroplasts
  • Requires the input of water as well as light
    energy.
  • Can be summarised by the reaction below

16
Steps in light-dependent reaction
  • Sunlight is trapped by chlorophyll a (or other
    pigments) and light energy is converted to
    chemical energy.
  • Absorbed energy is used to produce ATP and split
    water molecules to form H ions and oxygen (waste
    product). This involves the electron transport
    chain.
  • H ions are gathered by a carrier molecule or
    acceptor molecule (NADP in this case).
  • NADP becomes NADPH and transports H ions from
    the grana to the stroma.
  • H ions and ATP produced in light-dependent
    reaction are utilised in light-independent
    reaction.

17
Light dependent reaction
18
Light-independent Reaction
  • Also known as dark reaction or Calvin cycle.
  • Occurs in the stroma and involves the reduction
    of carbon.
  • Does not directly depend on light involvement but
    does dependent on previous stage occurring.
  • Can be summarised by the reaction below

19
Steps in light-independent reaction
  • Carbon reduction (from CO2 to a sugar C(H2O)n)
    requires a supply of carbon dioxide and hydrogen
    ions, and an input of energy.
  • Carbon dioxide can come from the air surrounding
    the leaf or from cellular respiration reactions.
  • Energy required to drive these reactions comes
    from ATP and loaded carriers (NADPH molecules)
    produced during the light-dependent stage.
  • H is the reducing agent and ATP is the source of
    energy for reducing carbon dioxide to organic
    compounds such as glucose and other sugars.
  • Plants do not build sugars simply by joining CO2
    molecules together. Sugar formation involves a
    cyclic set of reactions in which intermediate
    substances are formed.

20
Light independent reaction
21
C3 plants
  • In most plants the first step in carbon reduction
    reaction is the Calvin cycle.
  • The first step of this reaction is
  • Because the product of this reaction contains
    three carbon atoms, plants that carry out this
    reaction are known as C3 plants.

22
The Calvin Cycle
  • Each time the cycle proceeds, one carbon one
    carbon dioxide molecule enters the cycle and is
    fixed and reduced.
  • To produce a 6-carbon compound that is released
    from the cycle, six turns of the cycle must take
    place.
  • At the completion of each turn of the cycle, the
    starting compound is regenerated and so the cycle
    can proceed provided that CO2, ATP and NADPH are
    also available.
  • The Calvin cycle in C3 plants occurs in nearly
    all trees and most shrubs and herbs.

23
The Calvin Cycle
24
C4 plants
  • C4 plants occur mainly in hot, dry habitats and
    include important crop plants such as corn and
    sugar cane.
  • The light independent reaction of these plants
    involves a series of reactions which precede the
    Calvin cycle. In C4 plants, the first step
    before the Calvin cycle is
  • The 4-C compound undergoes further reactions and
    is transported to cells surrounding the vascular
    bundle.
  • Once here, the 4-C compound releases a molecule
    of carbon dioxide which enters the normal Calvin
    cycle.

25
Other variations on photosynthesis
  • CAM (crassulacean acid metabolism) plants
  • Plants such as pineapples and cacti close their
    stomata during the day and open them at night, at
    which time they take up carbon dioxide and
    convert it to four-carbon organic acids (e.g.
    crassulacean acid), which accumulate in the
    central vacuole.
  • During the day, while the stomata are closed,
    carbon dioxide is released from these organic
    acids and used immediately for C3 photosynthesis.
  • CAM plants are adapted to conditions of high
    daytime temperatures, intense sunlight and low
    soil moisture.
  • Mistletoe
  • Although mistletoe plants, Amyema species, can
    carry out photosynthesis, they are partly
    parasitic because they must obtain their mineral
    nutrients and water from a host.

26
Which type of photosynthesis is best?
C3 plants C4 plants CAM plants
Make stable molecules with 3 carbons Use more ATP to produce stable 4 carbon sugar, so in cooler climates C3 is more efficient Carbon dioxide released by the metabolism of cellular acids is used in C3 photosynthesis
Up to 50 of carbon dioxide absorbed through leaves is released before it can be used to make glucose by photosynthesis. Close their stomata during day and open them at night to prevent water loss in hot climates
In warm conditions the photosynthetic enzyme binds with oxygen instead of carbon dioxide Have photosynthetic enzymes that never bind with oxygen and are more efficient during hot weather than C3 plants
27
The importance of PGAL
  • PGAL (phosphoglyceraldehyde) is an important 3
    carbon compound formed during the Calvin cycle.
  • PGAL is the starting point for the production of
    sugars in the cytosol outside the chloroplast
  • Two PGAL molecules can join to form fructose (6
    carbon monosaccharide).
  • Fructose can be converted to glucose.
  • Fructose and glucose can combine to form sucrose
    disaccharide form in which carbohydrates are
    transported from the leaf to other parts of the
    plant via the phloem
  • Many glucose units can combine to form starch
    (storage molecule in plants).

28
The importance of sugars
  • All cells can use sugars as a starting point for
    the manufacture of other carbohydrates and
    lipids.
  • They can react sugars with with nitrogen to form
    non-essential amino acids and nitrogenous bases
    that are found in nucleic acids.
  • The chemical energy is starch is used directly or
    indirectly by consumers in cellular respiration
    to produce ATP for their energy requirements.

29
Factors that influence photosynthesis
  • Light intensity
  • Carbon dioxide availability
  • Temperature
  • Indirect factors

30
Light intensity
  • The rate of photosynthesis usually increases with
    light intensity until there is another limiting
    factor, such as the saturation of chloroplasts.
  • About 20 of light that hits the leaf is
    reflected.
  • Only about 1 of light absorbed by the leaf is
    converted to chemical energy.

31
Carbon dioxide
  • For most plants, carbon dioxide from air
    dissolves in extracellular fluid before entering
    photosynthetic cells.
  • There are local variations in carbon dioxide
    levels in air, in different habitats and at
    different times of the day.
  • Aquatic plants can also use hydrogen carbonate
    (carbonic acid), which forms when carbon dioxide
    dissolves in water.
  • CO2 released as a product of cellular respiration
    can also be used for photosynthesis, but usually
    only provides a small amount of the total carbon
    dioxide requirements.
  • The degree to which the level of carbon dioxide
    affects the rate of photosynthesis is different
    for C3, C4 and CAM plants.
  • C4 and CAM plants are more efficient than C3
    plants at trapping carbon dioxide when it is
    warm.

32
Compensation point
  • At low levels of light intensity, the rate of
    photosynthesis is less than the rate of cellular
    respiration, so there is net output of carbon
    dioxide by plants.
  • The light intensity at which the rate of carbon
    dioxide produced by cellular respiration equals
    the rate of carbon dioxide used in photosynthesis
    is known as the light compensation point.

33
Temperature
  • Photosynthesis increases with increasing
    temperature until around 20-40oC, depending on
    plant species, then it declines again.
  • Plants that live in hotter climates are at higher
    end of the range.
  • In C3 plants, oxygen displaces trapped carbon
    dioxide more rapidly as temperature increases
    (enzyme binds oxygen instead of carbon dioxide).

34
Indirect factors
  • Water
  • Required in photosynthesis
  • Only 1 of water passing up the xylem is used in
    photosynthesis. The rest is used in other
    chemical reactions, to hydrate cells or is lost
    in transpiration.
  • If there is not enough water to hydrate the cells
    and keep them turgid, the stomata close. This
    prevents carbon dioxide entering the leaves,
    therefore photosynthesis decreases.
  • Level of chlorophyll
  • Limits photosynthesis
  • Yellow leaves will have a lower rate of
    photosynthesis.
  • Nitrogen and Magnesium
  • Chlorophyll contains the elements nitrogen and
    magnesium.
  • If the soil is deficient in one or both these
    elements, the plants cannot make sufficient
    chlorophyll.

35
Rate of photosynthesis
  • Any of the factors that influence photosynthesis
    may limit the rate of photosynthesis.
  • Photosynthesis will be limited by only one factor
    at a time, but if conditions in an individual
    chloroplast change, the particular factor that is
    limiting may also change.
  • For example, carbon dioxide levels that are
    adequate (not limiting) in conditions of low
    light may become limiting if light intensity
    increases.
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