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Title: Photosynthesis:%20Energy%20from%20Sunlight


1
Photosynthesis Energy from Sunlight
2
10 Photosynthesis Energy from Sunlight
  • 10.1 What Is Photosynthesis?
  • 10.2 How Does Photosynthesis Convert Light Energy
    into Chemical Energy?
  • 10.3 How Is Chemical Energy Used to Synthesize
    Carbohydrates?
  • 10.4 How Have Plants Adapted Photosynthesis to
    Environmental Conditions?
  • 10.5 How Does Photosynthesis Interact with Other
    Pathways?

3
10 Photosynthesis Energy from Sunlight
To predict how plants will respond to rising CO2
levels, biologists have performed large-scale
experiments. Photosynthesis rates increase as
atmospheric CO2 concentration increases.
Opening Question What possible effects will
increased atmospheric CO2 have on global food
production?
4
10.1 What Is Photosynthesis?
  • Photosynthesis synthesis from light
  • Energy from sunlight is captured and used to
    convert CO2 to more complex carbon compounds.

5
Figure 10.1 The Ingredients for Photosynthesis
6
10.1 What Is Photosynthesis?
  • Using stable 18O isotopes, Ruben and Kamen
    determined that water is the source of O2
    released during photosynthesis

7
Figure 10.2 The Source of the Oxygen Produced by
Photosynthesis
8
Working with Data 10.1 Water Is the Source of
the Oxygen Produced by Photosynthesis
  • The stable isotope 18O was used to confirm the
    hypothesis that O2 generated during
    photosynthesis came from water.
  • Algal cells were exposed to water, and CO2
    generated from K2CO3 and KHCO3.

9
Working with Data 10.1 Water Is the Source of
the Oxygen Produced by Photosynthesis
  • Experiment 1 water contained more 18O than 16O.
  • Experiment 2 the CO2 contained more 18O than
    16O.
  • A mass spectrometer measured the isotopic content
    of reactants and the O2 produced.

10
Working with Data 10.1 Water Is the Source of
the Oxygen Produced by Photosynthesis
  • Question 1
  • In Experiment 1, was the isotopic ratio of O2
    similar to that of H2O or to that of CO2?
  • What about in Experiment 2?

11
Working with Data 10.1, Table 1
12
Working with Data 10.1 Water Is the Source of
the Oxygen Produced by Photosynthesis
  • Question 2
  • What can you conclude from these data?

13
10.1 What Is Photosynthesis?
  • Photosynthesis is an oxidationreduction process.
  • Oxygen atoms in H2O are in a reduced state they
    are oxidized to O2.
  • Carbon atoms are in the oxidized state in CO2
    they are reduced to a carbohydrate.

14
10.1 What Is Photosynthesis?
  • Water is the donor of protons and electrons in
    oxygenic photosynthesis.
  • In anoxygenic photosynthesis, other molecules
    donate the protons and electrons.
  • Example purple sulfur bacteria use H2S.

15
10.1 What Is Photosynthesis?
  • Two pathways occur in different parts of the
    chloroplast
  • Light reactions Convert light energy to chemical
    energy as ATP and NADPH.
  • Light-independent reactions Use ATP and NADPH
    (from the light reactions) plus CO2 to produce
    carbohydrates.

16
Figure 10.3 An Overview of Photosynthesis
17
10.2 How Does Photosynthesis Convert Light Energy
into Chemical Energy?
  • Light is a form of energyelectromagnetic
    radiation.
  • It is propagated as wavesthe amount of energy is
    inversely proportional to its wavelength.
  • Light also behaves as particles, called photons.

18
Figure 10.4 The Electromagnetic Spectrum
19
10.2 How Does Photosynthesis Convert Light Energy
into Chemical Energy?
  • Certain molecules absorb photons of specific
    wavelengths.
  • When a photon hits a molecule, it can
  • Bounce offscattered or reflected
  • Pass throughtransmitted
  • Be absorbed, adding energy to the molecule
    (excited state)

20
In-Text Art, Ch. 10, p. 189
21
10.2 How Does Photosynthesis Convert Light Energy
into Chemical Energy?
  • The absorbed energy boosts an electron in the
    molecule into a shell farther from the nucleus.
  • This electron is held less firmly making the
    molecule more unstable and reactive.

22
10.2 How Does Photosynthesis Convert Light Energy
into Chemical Energy?
  • Molecules that absorb specific wavelengths in the
    visible range are called pigments.
  • Other wavelengths are scattered or transmitted,
    which imparts the colors that we see.
  • Chlorophyll absorbs blue and red light and
    scatters green.

23
10.2 How Does Photosynthesis Convert Light Energy
into Chemical Energy?
  • Absorption spectrum plot of wavelengths absorbed
    by a pigment.
  • Action spectrum plot of photosynthesis against
    wavelengths of light to which it is exposed.
  • The rate of photosynthesis can be measured by the
    amount of O2 released.

24
Figure 10.5 Absorption and Action Spectra
25
10.2 How Does Photosynthesis Convert Light Energy
into Chemical Energy?
  • The major pigment in photosynthesis is
    chlorophyll a.
  • It has a hydrocarbon tail that anchors it in a
    protein complex in the thylakoid membrane called
    a photosystem.

26
Figure 10.6 The Molecular Structure of
Chlorophyll a
27
10.2 How Does Photosynthesis Convert Light Energy
into Chemical Energy?
  • Chlorophyll a and accessory pigments
    (chlorophylls b and c, carotenoids, phycobilins)
    are arranged in light-harvesting complexes, or
    antenna systems.
  • Several complexes surround a reaction center in
    the photosystem.

28
Figure 10.7 Energy Transfer and Electron
Transport (Part 2)
29
10.2 How Does Photosynthesis Convert Light Energy
into Chemical Energy?
  • Light energy is captured in the light harvesting
    complexes and transferred to the reaction
    centers.
  • Accessory pigments absorb light in other
    wavelengths, increasing the range of light that
    can be used.
  • Types of accessory pigments characterize
    different groups.

30
10.2 How Does Photosynthesis Convert Light Energy
into Chemical Energy?
  • When a pigment molecule absorbs a photon, the
    excited state is unstable and the energy is
    quickly released.
  • The energy is absorbed by other pigment molecules
    and passed to chlorophyll a in a reaction center.

31
Figure 10.8 Noncyclic Electron Transport Uses
Two Photosystems
32
10.2 How Does Photosynthesis Convert Light Energy
into Chemical Energy?
  • The excited chlorophyll a molecule (Chl) gives
    up an electron to an acceptor.
  • Chl acceptor ? Chl acceptor
  • A redox reaction The chlorophyll gets oxidized
    the acceptor molecule is reduced.

33
10.2 How Does Photosynthesis Convert Light Energy
into Chemical Energy?
  • The electron acceptor is the first in a chain of
    carriers in the thylakoid membrane.
  • The final electron acceptor is NADP, which gets
    reduced
  • NADP H 2e ? NADPH

34
10.2 How Does Photosynthesis Convert Light Energy
into Chemical Energy?
  • Noncyclic electron transport uses two
    photosystems
  • Photosystem I has P700 chlorophyll absorbs best
    at 700 nm.
  • Photosystem II has P680 chlorophyll absorbs best
    at 680 nm.

35
10.2 How Does Photosynthesis Convert Light Energy
into Chemical Energy?
  • Photosystem II
  • When excited chlorophyll (Chl) gives up its
    electron, it is unstable, and grabs another
    electron (it is a strong oxidizer).
  • The electron comes from water
  • 2Chl H2O ? 2Chl 2H ½O2

36
10.2 How Does Photosynthesis Convert Light Energy
into Chemical Energy?
  • The energetic electrons are passed through a
    series of membrane-bound carriers to a final
    acceptor at a lower energy level.
  • A proton gradient is generated and is used by ATP
    synthase to make ATP.

37
10.2 How Does Photosynthesis Convert Light Energy
into Chemical Energy?
  • Photosystem I
  • An excited electron from the Chl reduces an
    acceptor.
  • The oxidized Chl takes an electron from the last
    carrier in photosystem II.
  • The energetic electron is passed through several
    carriers and reduces NADP to NADPH.

38
Figure 10.8 Noncyclic Electron Transport Uses
Two Photosystems
39
10.2 How Does Photosynthesis Convert Light Energy
into Chemical Energy?
  • Cyclic electron transport
  • Uses photosystem I and electron transport to
    produce ATP instead of NADPH.
  • Cyclic the electron from the excited chlorophyll
    passes back to the same chlorophyll.

40
Figure 10.9 Cyclic Electron Transport Traps
Light Energy as ATP
41
10.2 How Does Photosynthesis Convert Light Energy
into Chemical Energy?
  • ATP is formed by photophosphorylation, a
    chemiosmotic mechanism.
  • H is transported across the thylakoid membrane
    into the lumen, creating an electrochemical
    gradient.

42
Figure 10.10 Photophosphorylation
43
10.2 How Does Photosynthesis Convert Light Energy
into Chemical Energy?
  • Water oxidation creates more H in the thylakoid
    lumen and NADP reduction removes H in the
    stroma.
  • Both reactions contribute to the H gradient.

44
10.2 How Does Photosynthesis Convert Light Energy
into Chemical Energy?
  • High concentration of H in the lumen drives
    movement of H back into the stroma through
    protein channels.
  • The channels are ATP synthases that couple
    movement of protons with formation of ATP.

45
10.3 How Is Chemical Energy Used to Synthesize
Carbohydrates?
  • CO2 fixation CO2 is reduced to carbohydrates.
  • Occurs in the stroma.
  • Energy in ATP and NADPH is used to reduce CO2.

46
10.3 How Is Chemical Energy Used to Synthesize
Carbohydrates?
  • Calvin and Benson used the 14C radioisotope to
    determine the sequence of reactions in CO2
    fixation.
  • They exposed Chlorella to 14CO2, then extracted
    the organic compounds and separated them by paper
    chromatography.

47
Figure 10.11 Tracing the Pathway of CO2 (Part 1)
48
Figure 10.11 Tracing the Pathway of CO2 (Part 2)
49
10.3 How Is Chemical Energy Used to Synthesize
Carbohydrates?
  • The first compound to be formed is
    3-phosphoglycerate, 3PG, a 3-carbon sugar
    phosphate.

50
10.3 How Is Chemical Energy Used to Synthesize
Carbohydrates?
  • The pathway of CO2 fixation is cyclic the Calvin
    cycle.
  • CO2 first binds to 5-C RuBP the 6-C compound
    immediately breaks down into two molecules of
    3PG.
  • The enzyme rubisco (ribulose bisphoshate
    carboxylase/oxygenase) is the most abundant
    protein in the world.

51
Figure 10.12 RuBP Is the Carbon Dioxide Acceptor
52
Working with Data 10.2 Tracing the Pathway of CO2
  • In experiments to determine the reactions of
    photosynthesis, the green alga Chlorella was
    exposed to CO2 made with the radioactive 14C
    isotope.
  • Cells were exposed for various periods of time.

53
Working with Data 10.2 Tracing the Pathway of CO2
  • The first reaction in CO2 fixation can occur in
    the dark.
  • Cells were exposed to 20 minutes of light
    followed by various lengths of darkness.

54
Working with Data 10.2, Table 1
55
Working with Data 10.2 Tracing the Pathway of CO2
  • Question 1
  • Using the data in the table, plot radioactivity
    in 3PG versus time.
  • What do the data show?

56
Working with Data 10.2 Tracing the Pathway of CO2
  • Question 2
  • Why did the amount of radioactively labeled RuBP
    go down after 30 seconds in the dark?

57
10.3 How Is Chemical Energy Used to Synthesize
Carbohydrates?
  • The Calvin cycle
  • Fixation of CO2 to 3PG
  • Reduction of 3PG to G3P
  • Regeneration of RuBP, the CO2 acceptor.
  • For every turn of the cycle, one CO2 is fixed and
    one RuBP is regenerated.

58
Figure 10.13 The Calvin Cycle
59
10.3 How Is Chemical Energy Used to Synthesize
Carbohydrates?
  • Glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate (G3P) is the product
    of the Calvin cycle.

60
10.3 How Is Chemical Energy Used to Synthesize
Carbohydrates?
  • Some G3P is exported to the cytosol and converted
    to hexoses (glucose and fructose) used in
    respiration.
  • Hexoses may be converted to sucrose and
    transported to other parts of the plant and used
    for energy or to build other molecules.

61
10.3 How Is Chemical Energy Used to Synthesize
Carbohydrates?
  • Some G3P is used to synthesize glucose and starch
    within the chloroplast.
  • The stored starch is used at night so that
    photosynthetic tissues can continue to export
    sucrose to the rest of the plant.

62
10.3 How Is Chemical Energy Used to Synthesize
Carbohydrates?
  • Products of the Calvin cycle are crucial to the
    entire biosphere.
  • The covalent bonds generated by the cycle provide
    almost all of the energy for life.

63
10.3 How Is Chemical Energy Used to Synthesize
Carbohydrates?
  • Photosynthetic organisms (autotrophs) use this
    energy for growth, reproduction, and development.
  • Heterotrophs cannot photosynthesize and depend on
    autotrophs for both energy and raw materials.

64
10.3 How Is Chemical Energy Used to Synthesize
Carbohydrates?
  • The Calvin cycle is stimulated by light
  • Protons pumped from stroma into thylakoids
    increase the pH, which favors activation of
    rubisco.
  • Electron transport reduces disulfide bonds in
    Calvin cycle enzymes to activate them.

65
Figure 10.14 The Photochemical Reactions
Stimulate the Calvin Cycle
66
10.4 How Have Plants Adapted Photosynthesis to
Environmental Conditions?
  • Rubisco is an oxygenase as well as a carboxylase.
  • It can add O2 to RuBP instead of CO2, reducing
    the amount of CO2 fixed.
  • Its affinity for CO2 is about 10 times higher,
    thus carboxylation is usually favored.

67
10.4 How Have Plants Adapted Photosynthesis to
Environmental Conditions?
  • But if O2 concentration in the leaf is high, O2
    combines with RuBP, resulting in
    photorespiration
  • RuBP O2 ? phosphoglycolate 3PG
  • Phosphoglycolate (2 carbons) does not enter the
    Calvin cycle, but another metabolic pathway
    converts it to 3PG.

68
10.4 How Have Plants Adapted Photosynthesis to
Environmental Conditions?
  • 2 phosphoglycolate O2 ? 3PG CO2
  • 75 of the carbon from phosphoglycolate are
    recovered for the Calvin cycle photorespiration
    reduces CO2 fixation by 25.
  • Photorespiration consumes O2 and releases CO2.
    Occurs only in the light.

69
Figure 10.15 Organelles of Photorespiration
(Part 1)
70
Figure 10.15 Organelles of Photorespiration
(Part 2)
71
10.4 How Have Plants Adapted Photosynthesis to
Environmental Conditions?
  • Photorespiration is more likely at high
    temperatures.
  • On hot, dry days stomata (leaf pores) are closed
    to prevent water loss. CO2 concentration falls as
    it is used in photosynthesis, and thus O2
    concentration increases photorespiration occurs.

72
10.4 How Have Plants Adapted Photosynthesis to
Environmental Conditions?
  • Plants differ in how they fix CO2.
  • C3 plants first product of CO2 fixation is 3PG.
    Cells in the leaf mesophyll have abundant
    rubisco.
  • On hot days, plants close stomata to conserve
    water, which limits entry of CO2 and
    photorespiration occurs.

73
10.4 How Have Plants Adapted Photosynthesis to
Environmental Conditions?
  • In C4 plants, oxaloacetate (4 carbons) is the
    first product of CO2 fixation.
  • They have a mechanism to increase CO2 near
    rubisco and isolate it from O2.
  • CO2 is fixed in mesophyll cells by PEP
    carboxylase into a 3-carbon compound,
    phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP), then to oxaloacetate.
  • PEP carboxylase has no oxygenase activity and
    fixes CO2 even when levels are low.

74
Figure 10.16 Leaf Anatomy of C3 and C4 Plants
75
10.4 How Have Plants Adapted Photosynthesis to
Environmental Conditions?
  • Oxaloacetate is converted to malate it diffuses
    to bundle sheath cells, which have modified
    chloroplasts that concentrate CO2 around rubisco.
  • Malate is decarboxylated to pyruvate and CO2.
    Pyruvate moves back to mesophyll cells to
    regenerate PEP, which requires ATP.
  • The CO2 enters the Calvin cycle.

76
Figure 10.17 The Anatomy and Biochemistry of C4
Carbon Fixation (Part 1)
77
Figure 10.17 The Anatomy and Biochemistry of C4
Carbon Fixation (Part 2)
78
10.4 How Have Plants Adapted Photosynthesis to
Environmental Conditions?
  • C4 plants must use some energy to pump up CO2
    concentration in bundle sheath cells.
  • In cool, cloudy conditions, C3 plants have an
    advantage, but in warmer, dryer climates, C4
    plants have the advantage, since photorespiration
    does not occur.

79
10.4 How Have Plants Adapted Photosynthesis to
Environmental Conditions?
  • C3 plants are more efficient but C4 plants may
    have evolved in response to declining CO2 levels
    12 mya.
  • Atmospheric CO2 levels have been increasing over
    the last 200 years. Further increases may give C3
    plants an advantage if CO2 becomes high enough to
    prevent photorespiration.

80
10.4 How Have Plants Adapted Photosynthesis to
Environmental Conditions?
  • Some plants have crassulacean acid metabolism
    (CAM).
  • CO2 is initially fixed into a 4-C molecule by PEP
    carboxylase, but fixation and the Calvin cycle
    are separated in time, not space.
  • Night CO2 fixed by PEP carboxylase stomata are
    open, but less water loss occurs. Malate is
    stored.

81
10.4 How Have Plants Adapted Photosynthesis to
Environmental Conditions?
  • Day Stomata close to conserve water malate
    moves to chloroplasts and is decarboxylated.
  • This supplies CO2 for the Calvin cycle, and
    light reactions provide ATP and NADPH.
  • CAM plants include water-storing plants
    (succulents) of the family Crassulaceae, many
    cacti, pineapples, and others.

82
Table 10.1
83
10.5 How Does Photosynthesis Interact with Other
Pathways?
  • Green plants can synthesize all the molecules
    they need from simple starting materials CO2,
    H2O, phosphate, sulfate, ammonium ions, and other
    minerals.
  • They use the carbohydrates produced in
    photosynthesis to produce energy by respiration
    and (rarely) fermentation. Respiration occurs in
    both the light and dark.

84
10.5 How Does Photosynthesis Interact with Other
Pathways?
  • Photosynthesis and respiration are closely linked
    through the Calvin cycle.
  • Partitioning of G3P is important
  • Some goes to the cytosol and enters glycolysis
    and cellular respiration or is used to make other
    compounds.
  • Some enters gluconeogenesis sugars are formed
    and transported to other parts of the plant.

85
Figure 10.18 Metabolic Interactions in a Plant
Cell (Part 1)
86
Figure 10.18 Metabolic Interactions in a Plant
Cell (Part 2)
87
10.5 How Does Photosynthesis Interact with Other
Pathways?
  • Only 5 of total sunlight energy is transformed
    to the energy of chemical bonds.
  • Understanding the inefficiencies of
    photosynthesis may be important as climate change
    drives changes in photosynthetic activity of
    plants.

88
Figure 10.19 Energy Losses in Photosynthesis
89
10 Answer to Opening Question
  • Higher CO2 concentration generally leads to
    increased photosynthesis, especially in C3
    plants.
  • C3 crops such as wheat and rice may grow more,
    but the parts that we eat (seeds) may not grow
    more.

90
10 Answer to Opening Question
  • Increased plant growth may be countered by the
    effects of CO2 on climateincreased temperatures
    and changing rainfall patterns.
  • Biologists estimate that increased CO2 will
    result in moderately increased food production.
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