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Chapter 6 Photosynthesis Section 6.1 Energy Processes for Life  Autotrophs manufacture their own food from inorganic substances  Use photosynthesis to convert light energy from the sun into chemical energy  Heterotrophs cannot manufacture their own food  Must obtain food by eating autotrophs or other heterotrophs Photosynthesis  Involves a complex series of chemical reactions in which the product of one reaction is consumed in the next reaction  Biochemical pathway 6CO2 + 6H2O + solar energy  C6H12O6 + 6O2 Solar energy drives a series of chemical reactions that require carbon dioxide and water Light Absorption in Chloroplasts  Light reactions- the initial reactions in photosynthesis  Begin with the absorption of light in chloroplasts Chloroplasts  Each chloroplast is surrounded by a pair of membranes  Inside the membranes are stacks of thylakoids  The stacks are called grana  The fluid surrounding the grana is called stroma Light and Pigments  Visible spectrum- white light can be separated into an array of colors when passed through a prism  ROY G. BIV Light  Light travels in waves  The distance from the crest of one wave to the crest of another wave is called a wavelength Chloroplast Pigments     Pigments- compounds that absorb light Chlorophyll a – absorbs more red light Chlorophyll b – absorbs more blue light Carotenoids – absorbs more green light  Only chlorophyll a is directly involved in the light reactions of photosynthesis  Chlorophyll b assists chlorophyll a in capturing light energy (accessory pigment)  In the leaves of a plant, chlorophylls are abundant  In Fall, plants lose their chlorophylls and their leaves take on the color of the carotenoids Electron Transport  Each cluster of pigment molecules is a photosystem  Two types of photosystems: photosystem I & photosystem II Light Reactions  1. light energy excites electrons in chlorophyll a molecules of photosystem II  2. These electrons move to a primary electron acceptor  3. The electrons are then transferred along a series of molecules called an electron transport chain  4. light excites electrons in chlorophyll a molecules of photosystem I. As these electrons move to another primary electron acceptor, they are replaced by electrons from photosystem II  5. The electrons from photosystem I are transferred along a second electron transport chain. At the end of this chain, they combine with NADP+ and H+ to make NADPH Restoring Photosystem II  Replacement electrons come from water molecules  An enzyme inside the thylakoid splits water molecules into protons, electrons, and oxygen  2H2O  4H+ + 4e- + O2 Chemiosmosis  Synthesis of ATP  Depends on a concentration gradient of protons across a thylakoid membrane  The concentration of protons is higher inside the thylakoid  ATP synthase makes ATP by adding a phosphate group to ADP  ATP synthase functions as a carrier protein