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Biology 20 Unit III – Chapter 5 Tannant Unit 3 – Photosynthesis and Cellular Respiration Preparation: Plant Cells and Organelles 1 Biology 20 Unit III – Chapter 5 Tannant Animal Cells and Organelles Structure and Function of Cell Membranes 2 Biology 20 Unit III – Chapter 5 Tannant Protein molecules in a cell membrane acting as channels (passive transport) or active pumps (active transport) The active transport processes of endocytosis and exocytosis. 3 Unit III – Chapter 5 Tannant Biology 20 Section 5.1 – Matter and Energy Pathways in Living Systems Photosynthesis Cellular Respiration Captures Solar Energy Releases Chemical Energy Chloroplasts Mitochondria Only in Plant cells Both plant and animal cells ATP and Cellular Activity - Chemical energy used by cells is in the form of ATP (adenosine triphosphate) There are other high energy chemicals, but ATP is the most common. o ATP is a useful energy molecule because it can be broken down and reformed very quickly (oxidation-reduction process...or linked catabolic-anabolic Adenosine Triphosphate Adenosine Diphosphate Adenosine – P ~ P ~ P Adenosine – P ~ P chemical reactions) 4 Biology 20 - Unit III – Chapter 5 Tannant The energy of the third phosphate bond is key to the action of ATP. o When the phosphate bond breaks, energy is released and transferred to other chemicals involved in cellular activity. This forms ADP, a lower energy molecule. o ADP can be regenerated when phosphate is added to ADP. Chloroplasts - Membrane bound organelles containing the pigment chlorophyll o Contain 2 surrounding membranes Outer membrane Inner membrane o Also contain Fluid – in the inner space of a chloroplast (Stroma) 5 Unit III – Chapter 5 Tannant Biology 20 Concentrated mix of proteins and other chemicals needed to synthesize carbohydrates. Thylakoid membrane – a third membrane inside the stroma Interconnected, flattened sacs (thylakoids) May be stacked into columns called grana Chlorophyll is located in (embedded in) the thylakoid membranes. Mitochondria - Site of cellular respiration - Organelles found in all eukaryotes - Smaller than chloroplasts - Membrane bound organelles o Contain 2 membranes Outer membrane Inner membrane – highly folded layer Folds are called – cristae Cristae provide a large surface area for the production of ATP o Also contain Fluid filled inner space – matrix Contains proteins and other chemicals needed to break down carbohydrates 6 Biology 20 Unit III – Chapter 5 Tannant Metabolic Pathways for Cellular Reactions - Chemical reactions inside living organisms often cannot occur in the same manner they would in a lab. Reactions in living organisms cannot release too much heat or absorb too much heat or the reactions would kill the organism o Therefore, chemical reactions in living organisms are broken down into a series of smaller reactions that occur in a specific order. The end product of one small reaction is the reactant for the next. Each smaller reaction is controlled by biological catalysts called – enzymes Energy can be stored or released from ATP at each smaller reaction, so that there is no overwhelming exothermic or endothermic event. o The step-by-step sequence of smaller chemical reactions are called – metabolic pathways. Enzymes Catalyze Cellular Metabolism and Energy Production Metabolism – all the chemical reactions that occur within a cell to support life functions - Catabolic reactions to break down reactants into smaller, usually lower-energy products. o Energy is released – exothermic - Anabolic reactions synthesize (form) larger products from smaller reactants. o Energy is absorbed – endothermic o Energy usually from ATP - Catalysts – Enzymes To speed up reactions you can add heat (which is not practical in living organisms) or you can use a catalyst 7 Unit III – Chapter 5 Tannant Biology 20 A substance that speeds up a reaction (reducing activation energy) without being used up in the reaction itself. Enzymes are protein molecules with highly specific shapes Enzymes can change their shape depending upon environmental conditions and what chemicals it is reacting with The shape determines its function Chemical reactants ‘fit’ into regions of the enzyme (like a lock holds a shape that a key can fit into) The enzyme ‘holds’ the chemical reactants together in the ideal configuration for the reaction to occur Linking Reactions through Oxidation and Reduction Oxidation – when an atom or molecule loses electrons - Remember, electrons are never ‘lost’...they only join up with other atoms/molecules - Therefore all oxidation-reduction reactions are coupled...they cannot occur without each other. - Often called redox reactions (reduction-oxidation) Reduction – when an atom or molecule gains electrons - In any chemical reaction between 2 compounds, one compound loses electrons (is oxidized) and the other gains those electrons (is reduced). - The chemical that is oxidized CAUSES the other to be reduced, and so is called the Reducing Agent - The chemical that is reduced CAUSES the other to be oxidized, and so is called the Oxidizing Agent 8 Biology 20 Unit III – Chapter 5 Tannant Section 5.2 – Photosynthesis Stores Energy in Organic Compounds Photosynthesis Overall (Net) Reaction 6 CO2 + 6 H2O + sunlight + chloroplasts C6H12O6 + O2 Glucose - Glucose is converted to Cellulose (wood fibres) Other sugars (fructose, etc) Starch (long chains of carbohydrates for storage) Glycoproteins – sugars combined with proteins Found on cell membranes and involved with cell ID and immune system functioning The Process of Photosynthesis - The arrow in the overall photosynthesis equation represents over 100 step-by-step chemical reactions in the metabolic pathway - Photosynthesis - 2 steps o Photo light capturing (light dependent reaction) Trapped light energy is used to generate 2 high energy compounds (ATP and NADPH) o Synthesis producing carbohydrates (light-independent reaction The ATP and NADPH are used to reduce CO2 to make glucose. 9 Biology 20 Unit III – Chapter 5 Tannant Light Dependent Reactions Photosystems – clusters of pigments (chlorophyll and others) Pigments in the thylakoid membrane absorb light energy Chlorophyll – reflects green light but absorbs red and blue light. Pigments – compounds that absorb some wavelengths of light and reflect others. (The reflected light waves give the pigment its colour.) Beta-carotene (carotenoids) – absorb blue and green light, but reflect yellow, orange, and red. Light energy striking the pigment causes electrons to move the electrons are passed to other chemicals. Absorption Spectrum – a graph that shows the relative amounts of light of different colours that a compound absorbs. Action Spectrum – shows the relative effectiveness of different wavelengths of light for promoting photosynthesis determined by the rate of oxygen produced from photosynthesis. The Metabolic Pathway of the Light Dependent Photosynthesis Reaction Photosystems – the clusters of pigments (chlorophyll and others) embedded in the thylakoid membrane. - Named according to the order of discovery o Photosystem II (PSII) – first in the sequence of photosynthesis. o Photosystem I (PSI) – second in the sequence of photosynthesis. - Present in the photosystems One dozen or more chlorophyll molecules A few carotenoid molecules 10 Unit III – Chapter 5 Tannant Biology 20 - An electron acceptor molecule (the reaction centre) Example: Consider the photosystems like radio antennas...they collect the light and pass the electric current on to the station. Electron Transport System - A series of electron-carrying molecules - With each transfer along the system the electron releases a small amount of energy. This energy is used to push hydrogen ions from the stoma across the thylakoid membrane into the thylakoid space. 11 Biology 20 Unit III – Chapter 5 Tannant Steps of the light dependent reaction: 1. Light strikes the photosystem II 2. An electron in the photosystem reaction centre is ‘excited’. 3. The electron is passed to an electron-accepting molecule. a. Gain electron = reduced = has greater energy 4. The reaction centre in the photosystem is now missing an electron – which has to be replaced before more light can be absorbed. a. Water molecule is split 2 H+ and O2- and one electron, which is taken in by the photosystem to replace the missing electron. b. The oxygen released is eventually released as oxygen gas by the plant. 5. From the electron acceptor the electron is passed to the electron transport system. a. The hydrogen ions [H+] from the water molecule are pushed into the thylakoid. b. Results in a greater concentration of hydrogen inside the membrane. This creates a potential energy situation = stored energy c. This energy will be used to generate ATP i. ADP + Pfree phosphate group + energyfrom [H+] gradient ATP 6. While the above steps take place, photosystem I also absorbs light energy. a. Energy transferred to a reaction centre b. Electron becomes excited c. Electron passed to electron acceptor i. Missing electron from reaction centre is replaced by electron from the end of photosystem II transport chain. d. Electron passed from electron acceptor to electron transport chain i. The electron reduces NADP+ to NADPH ii. NADPH is a high energy reducing agent that will be used in the lightindependent reactions. - Making ATP: Chemiosmosis When H+ ions are forced inside the thylakoid they cannot diffuse back (membrane is impermeable to them) An enzyme embedded in the thylakoid membrane called ATP Synthase (which is linked to an enzyme that bonds free phosphate groups to ADP) allows the H+ ions to fall back down the concentration gradient and move outside of thylakoid. Links the movement of H+ ions to the formation of ATP. 12 Biology 20 Unit III – Chapter 5 Tannant Biomimicry – scientists are looking at mimicking the chemical processes of photosynthesis to find ways of utilizing solar energy more efficiently. The Metabolic Pathway of the Light-Independent Photosynthesis Reactions Once there is enough NADPH and ATP in the stroma – the molecules can be used to synthesize glucose (whether light is present or not) Called the Calvin-Benson Cycle (or the Carbon-Fixing Cycle) 1. Fixing CO2 a. The carbon atom from CO2 is chemically bonded to a pre-existing molecule in the stroma (Ribulose Bisphosphate – RuBP...a 5-Carbon molecule) b. Produces a 6-carbon (unstable) compound i. Immediately breaks into two 3-Carbon compounds c. Summary so far: CO2 + RuBP unstable C6 2 C3 2. Reduction a. C3 molecules are low energy compounds. i. They are activated by ATP (phosphorylation = add phosphate from ATP to the carbon molecules) ii. Once activated (phosphorylated) they are reduced by NADPH b. After phosphorylation and reduction, the resulting molecules are PGAL (glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate) i. Some PGAL molecules leave the calvin-benson cycle to make glucose. ii. Remaining PGAL molecules move to the third stage of the calvin-benson cycle 3. Replacing RuBP a. Most of the PGAL molecules, in combination with ATP, are chemically rearranged to make RuBP (C5) 4. The Calvin-Benson Cycle must occur 6 times in order to synthesize one molecule of glucose a. Of the 12 PGAL molecules made, 10 are used to remake RuBP and 2 are used for glucose 13 Biology 20 Unit III – Chapter 5 Tannant Section 5.3 – Cellular Respiration Releases Energy from Organic Compounds Cellar Respiration – the step-by-step process of releasing energy from organic (carbon-based) compounds and storing that energy in high-energy chemical compounds like ATP. C6H12O6 + 6 O2 + mitochondria 6 CO2 + 6 H2O + heat + ATP energy - Glucose is oxidized to carbon dioxide. o Electrons (and H+ ions) are removed from glucose Three Pathways for Energy Release - Different species release energy from food in different ways. 1. Aerobic Cellular Respiration a. Oxic – containing oxygen – conditions b. Oxygen is required to produce ATP c. Animals, plants, and many types of fungi, protists, and bacteria are aerobic 2. Anaerobic Cellular Respiration a. Anoxic – no oxygen – conditions b. Oxygen is not required for ATP production c. In fact, oxygen may be lethal d. Bacteria, and members of the archaea domain, and chemosynthetic organisms, and some nitrogen-fixing bacteria 3. Fermentation a. An anaerobic process performed by yeasts and some bacteria i. Lactobacillus bulgaricus – bacteria causing milk to sour b. Fermentation can also occur in the muscle cells of aerobic organisms – forms lactic acid by-product 14 Biology 20 Unit III – Chapter 5 Tannant Aerobic Cellular Respiration - Oxidation reaction in which a series of enzyme-catalyzed reactions transfer electrons from high-energy molecules (glucose) to oxygen, releasing energy (ATP) - Cellular respiration begins with glycolysis in the cell cytoplasm Glycolysis is an anaerobic process and generates only a small amount of ATP Glycolysis = lysis of glucose = breakdown of glucose Occurs in all living cells Produces Pyruvate, a high-energy molecule If no oxygen is available, pyruvate will proceed to fermentation With sufficient oxygen, pyruvate enters the mitochondria and undergoes a series of preparatory reactions and then undergoes the Krebs Cycle - - Kerb’s Cycle A step-by-step process of transforming pyruvate into NADH and FADH2 (reducing agents) NADH and FADHH supply electrons to an electron transport system that produces a large amount of ATP Water is the final end-product Glycolysis – Inside the Cytoplasm 1. Glucose (C6) is split into two Pyruvate (C3 ) molecules a. ATP is required for this process- glucose must be phosphorylated before it can split b. Several more chemical reaction steps occur i. 4 ATP are synthesized (Carbon compounds are dephosphorylated and ADP is phosphorylated) ii. NAD+ (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide) is reduced (gain electron and H) to NADH. c. Summary: i. 2 ATP used ii. 4 ATP synthesized 15 Biology 20 Unit III – Chapter 5 Tannant iii. NADH synthesized iv. Pyruvate is produced Inside the Mitochondria – Kreb’s Cycle Preparation 2. Pyruvate loses a carbon (as CO2) to form a C2 molecule called acetate 3. The remaining C2 molecule joins with a molecule of Coenzyme A (CoA) to form acetyl CoA a. the CoA molecule acts like a ‘tow truck’ to tow the acetyl group to the Krebs Cycle 4. Another NAD+ NADH is formed 16 Biology 20 Unit III – Chapter 5 Tannant Inside the Mitochondria – The Kreb’s Cycle - - The Kreb’s cycle is also called the Citric Acid Cycle It is a cycle because the last compound (C4) must be regenerated During one complete cycle A C2 group (acetyl) is added to the C4 molecule 2 carbons are fully oxidized and released as CO2 Energy released from the oxidization of Carbon is transformed into reducing agents NADH and FADHH (flavin adenine dinucleotide) ATP is also generated The majority of ATP produced is in the electron transport system (similar to the ones in photosynthesis) High energy electrons are passed to a chain of electron-carrying molecules Found on the inner membrane of the mitochondria As electrons are passed from one carrier to another, small amounts of energy are released This energy is used to pump H+ ions across the membrane from the matrix to the inter-membrane space (between the inner and outer mitochondrial membranes) The build up of H+ ions creates a hydrogen ion concentration gradient o The ions diffuse back across the membrane though channels (ATP Synthase) o As H+ ions move, ATP is formed from ADP (Chemiosmosis) Oxygen is the final electron acceptor in the transport system o The oxygen accepts both electrons and hydrogen ions water 17 Biology 20 Unit III – Chapter 5 Tannant 18 Biology 20 Unit III – Chapter 5 Tannant Anaerobic Cellular Respiration - Since oxygen cannot act as the final electron acceptor, other inorganic chemical compounds like nitrates, sulphates, or carbon dioxide take that role. Depending upon the final electron acceptor, final products of anaerobic respiration may be free nitrogen (N2), sulphur (S2), nitrite, or methane. Fermentation - Not only does not require oxygen, but does not have an electron transport system Reactions occur in the cytoplasm of the cell There are many types of fermentation Lactate fermentation – muscle cells under oxygen debt Ethanol fermentation – yeasts able to function aerobically and anaerobically Products vary depending upon the conditions 19 Biology 20 Unit III – Chapter 5 Tannant Table 5.2 Selected Fermentation Products and their Uses Products of Possible Sources Fermentation Acetic Acid Uses Bacteria: Sours beer; Leuconostoc sp. Produces vinegar Acetobacter xylenam Diacetyl Bacteria: Streptococcus diacetialactis Lactic Acid (Lactate) Bacteria: Lactobacillus bulgaricus Propionic acid + CO2 Bacteria: Proprionibacterium shermani Provides fragrance and flavour to buttermilk Aids in changing milk to yogurt Produces the “eyes” (holes) and flavour of Swiss cheese Ethanol Fermentation and use in Fuels. - Ethanol is a waste product and toxic to the bacteria that produce it. - Ethanol is produced from the fermentation of corn and wheat This is a food source – is it ethical to use food to power cars and industry? When ethanol burns it still releases carbon dioxide – is this a viable alternative fuel then? 20 Unit III – Chapter 5 Tannant Biology 20 Ethanol does burn cleaner than other fossil fuels – this means is does not release potentially harmful volatile organic compounds (VOC’s) into the atmosphere, it does not contribute to smog, and reduces the amount of carbon monoxide in car exhaust. Is this enough benefit to support its use? 21