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The overall equation for the cellular respiration of glucose is A) C5H12O6 + 6 O2 → 5 CO2 + 6 H2O + energy. B) 5 CO2 + 6 H2O → C5H12O6 + 6 O2 + energy. C) C6H12O12 + 3 O2 → 6 CO2 + 6 H2O + energy. D) C6H12O6 + 6 O2 → 6 CO2 + 6H22O + energy. E) None of the choices are correct. Photosynthesis Review • Describe the environment inside different areas in the mitochondria. • What is the purpose of the electron transport chain? • What is the purpose of the Krebs cycle? Photosynthesis is the process on which nearly all life depends Photosynthesis is the opposite of respiration Photosynthesis completes the carbon cycle Photosynthesis counteracts the greenhouse effect Aerobic respiration of glucose is the most basic means for cells to acquire energy C6H12O6(s) + 6O2(g) 6CO2(g)+ 6H2O(l) + energy This is a combustion reaction Combustion is a kind of redox reaction Energy in presence of oxygen: ~38 ATP Photosynthesis can be thought of as the opposite of respiration 6CO2(g)+ 6H2O(l) + energy C6H12O6(s) + 6O2(g) carb. Diox.+H2O+ sunlight glucose+oxygen… This is still a redox reaction What is oxidized? What is reduced? Figure 7.4A Photosynthesis is the manufacture of food using energy from the sun • The site of photosynthesis is the chloroplast, which occurs in plant cells • Chloroplasts have their own DNA, and a double bilayer system as do mitochondria Photosynthesis has a few similarities with respiration • Metabolic cycles • Redox molecules (NADP+ instead of NAD+ and FAD) • ATP generation • Specialized organelles (chloroplasts instead of mitochondria) Chloroplast structure • Double bilayer • Grana made of Thylakoid membranes • Stroma is the liquid in which the grana sit • Photosynthesis occurs in chloroplasts in two stages- light reactions and dark LE 10-3 Leaf cross section Vein Mesophyll Stomata CO2 O2 Mesophyll cell Chloroplast 5 µm Outer membrane Thylakoid Thylakoid Stroma Granum space Intermembrane space Inner membrane 1 µm Where does the oxygen come from, H2O or CO2? 6CO2(g)+ 6H2O(l) + hν C6H12O6(s) + 6O2(g) There are 2 major stages of photosynthesis • Light-dependent reactions (“Light reactions”) • Light-independent reactions (“Dark reactions”) Light and Dark reactions • Light-dependent reactions – Water is split – ATP is formed – O2 is evolved • Light-independent reactions – Carbon is fixed – Electrons and ATP are consumed – Glucose precursor (G3P) is formed LE 10-5_1 H2O Light LIGHT REACTIONS Chloroplast LE 10-5_2 H2O Light LIGHT REACTIONS ATP NADPH Chloroplast O2 LE 10-5_3 H2O CO2 Light NADP+ ADP + Pi LIGHT REACTIONS CALVIN CYCLE ATP NADPH Chloroplast O2 [CH2O] (sugar) Light-dependent reactions depend on light (duh) • Some details about light: • Visible light is a small subset of the electromagnetic spectrum • 400-700nm • Short wavelengths~ higher energy Light can excite electrons in atoms Chlorophyll is a light-absorbing pigment • There are other light absorbing pigments • Chlorophyll a and b exist • Its absorption spectrum can be measured in vitro • We measure light absorbance with a spectrophotometer LE 10-9a Absorption of light by chloroplast pigments Chlorophyll a Chlorophyll b Carotenoids 400 500 600 Wavelength of light (nm) 700 Absorption spectra- will these be the same in vivo? LE 10-8a White light Refracting prism Chlorophyll solution Photoelectric tube Galvanometer 0 Slit moves to pass light of selected wavelength Green light 100 The high transmittance (low absorption) reading indicates that chlorophyll absorbs very little green light. LE 10-8b White light Refracting prism Chlorophyll solution Photoelectric tube 0 Slit moves to pass light of selected wavelength Blue light 100 The low transmittance (high absorption) reading indicates that chlorophyll absorbs most blue light. Chlorophyll is a fluorescent molecule • It absorbs blue • It re-emits red • (It can also absorb red…) Other pigments absorb different wavelengths Different pigments can cooperate to transfer energy Leaves are nature’s solar panels The light reactions Consisting of two photosystems, an electron transport chain, and ATP synthase Photosystems • There are two photosystems: 1) Photosystem II 2) Photosystem I A photosystem is… -A special chlorophyll molecule (p680/p700) -Other pigments -In a protein bundle, in the thylakoid membrane • There are two types of photosystems in the thylakoid membrane • Photosystem II functions first (the numbers reflect order of discovery) and is best at absorbing a wavelength of 680 nm • Photosystem I is best at absorbing a wavelength of 700 nm • The two photosystems work together to use light energy to generate ATP and NADPH LE 10-12 Thylakoid Photosystem Photon Light-harvesting complexes Thylakoid membrane Accessory pigments can be assembled with proteins into a membrane-bound photosystem Reaction center STROMA Primary electron acceptor e– At the center there is a reaction center Accessory pigments are a “photon transfer chain” (Resonance Energy Transfer) Transfer of energy Special chlorophyll a molecules Pigment molecules THYLAKOID SPACE (INTERIOR OF THYLAKOID) LE 10-13_1 H2O CO2 Light NADP+ ADP CALVIN CYCLE LIGHT REACTIONS ATP NADPH O2 [CH2O] (sugar) Primary acceptor Energy of electrons e– Light P680 Photosystem II (PS II) LE 10-13_2 H2O CO2 Light NADP+ ADP CALVIN LIGHT CYCLE REACTIONS ATP NADPH Photosystem II splits water O2 Primary acceptor Energy of electrons Water is oxidized 2H2O 4H+ +O2 [CH2O] (sugar) 2 H+ 1/ 2 + O2 Light H2O e– e– e– P680 Photosystem II (PS II) LE 10-13_3 H2O CO2 Light NADP+ ADP CALVIN CYCLE LIGHT REACTIONS Energy of electrons Photosystem II takes electrons from water and hands them to the e- transport chain ATP NADPH O2 [CH2O] (sugar) Primary acceptor Pq 2 H+ + 1/ 2 O 2 Light H2O e– Cytochrome complex Pc e– e– P680 ATP Photosystem II (PS II) The electron transport chain makes a proton gradient.. ATP synthase uses the proton gradient to make ATP Photosystem 1 hands e-’s to NADP+ to make NADPH… LE 10-13_4 H2O CO2 Light NADP+ ADP CALVIN CYCLE LIGHT REACTIONS ATP NADPH O2 [CH2O] (sugar) Primary acceptor Primary acceptor e– Energy of electrons Pq 2 H+ 1/ 2 + O2 Light H2O e– Cytochrome complex Pc e– e– P700 P680 Light ATP Photosystem II (PS II) Photosystem I (PS I) LE 10-13_5 H2 O CO2 Light NADP+ ADP CALVIN CYCLE LIGHT REACTIONS ATP NADPH O2 [CH2O] (sugar) Primary acceptor Primary acceptor e– Pq Energy of electrons 2 H+ e– H2O Cytochrome complex + 1/2 O2 Light Fd e– e– NADP+ reductase Pc e– e– NADPH + H+ P700 P680 Light ATP Photosystem II (PS II) NADP+ + 2 H+ Photosystem I (PS I) …and the NADPH is used to turn CO2 into Glucose LE 10-14 e– ATP e– e– NADPH e– e– e– Mill makes ATP e– Photosystem II Photosystem I A Comparison of Chemiosmosis in Chloroplasts and Mitochondria • Chloroplasts and mitochondria generate ATP by chemiosmosis, but use different sources of energy • Mitochondria transfer chemical energy from food to ATP; chloroplasts transform light energy into the chemical energy of ATP • The spatial organization of chemiosmosis differs in chloroplasts and mitochondria LE 10-16 Mitochondrion Chloroplast CHLOROPLAST STRUCTURE MITOCHONDRION STRUCTURE H+ Intermembrane space Membrane Lower [H+] Thylakoid space Electron transport chain ATP synthase Key Higher [H+] Diffusion Stroma Matrix ADP + P i ATP H+ LE 10-17 H2 O CO2 Light NADP+ ADP CALVIN CYCLE LIGHT REACTIONS ATP NADPH STROMA (Low H+ concentration) O2 [CH2O] (sugar) Cytochrome complex Photosystem II Light 2 Photosystem I Light NADP+ reductase H+ NADP+ + 2H+ Fd NADPH + H+ Pq H2O THYLAKOID SPACE (High H+ concentration) 1/2 Pc O2 +2 H+ 2 H+ To Calvin cycle Thylakoid membrane STROMA (Low H+ concentration) ATP synthase ADP + Pi ATP H+ The Calvin Cycle or, The Citric Acid cycle backward: ATP and electron carriers are used to reduce CO2 to glucose • The Calvin cycle requires three ingredients: – Carbon dioxide (catalyzed by rubisco) – ATP – Electrons RubisCO grabs CO2 from the air • AKA Ribulose Bisphosphate Carboxylase Oxidase • The carbon fixing enzyme • The most common enzyme on the planet • Adds 3CO2’s to 3 RuBP’s at a time LE 10-18_1 H2 O CO2 Input Light (Entering one CO2 at a time) 3 NADP+ ADP CALVIN CYCLE LIGHT REACTIONS ATP Phase 1: Carbon fixation NADPH Rubisco O2 [CH2O] (sugar) 3 P Short-lived intermediate P P 6 3-Phosphoglycerate 3 P P Ribulose bisphosphate (RuBP) 6 6 ADP CALVIN CYCLE Step 1: Carbon Fixation ATP LE 10-18_2 H2O CO2 Input Light (Entering one CO2 at a time) 3 NADP+ ADP CALVIN CYCLE LIGHT REACTIONS ATP Phase 1: Carbon fixation NADPH Rubisco O2 [CH2O] (sugar) 3 P P Short-lived intermediate 3 P P 6 P 3-Phosphoglycerate Ribulose bisphosphate (RuBP) 6 ATP 6 ADP CALVIN CYCLE Each lap generates 1 G3P Radioactive CO2 allows tracking of these molecules (with liquid N2) 6 P P 1,3-Bisphosphoglycerate 6 NADPH 6 NADP+ 6 Pi 6 P Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate (G3P) 1 P G3P (a sugar) Output Glucose and other organic compounds Phase 2: Reduction LE 10-18_3 H2O CO2 Input Light (Entering one CO2 at a time) 3 NADP+ ADP CALVIN CYCLE LIGHT REACTIONS ATP Phase 1: Carbon fixation NADPH Rubisco O2 [CH2O] (sugar) 3 P P Short-lived intermediate 3 P P 6 P 3-Phosphoglycerate Ribulose bisphosphate (RuBP) 6 ATP 6 ADP 3 ADP 3 CALVIN CYCLE 6 P ATP P 1,3-Bisphosphoglycerate 6 NADPH Phase 3: Regeneration of the CO2 acceptor (RuBP) 6 NADP+ 6 Pi P 5 G3P 6 P Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate (G3P) 1 P G3P (a sugar) Output Glucose and other organic compounds Phase 2: Reduction The Importance of Photosynthesis: A Review • The energy entering chloroplasts as sunlight gets stored as chemical energy in organic compounds • Sugar made in the chloroplasts supplies chemical energy and carbon skeletons to synthesize the organic molecules of cells • In addition to food production, photosynthesis produces the oxygen in our atmosphere LE 10-21 Light reactions Calvin cycle H2O CO2 Light NADP+ ADP + Pi RuBP Photosystem II Electron transport chain Photosystem I ATP NADPH 3-Phosphoglycerate G3P Starch (storage) Amino acids Fatty acids Chloroplast O2 Sucrose (export) • Which of the following is not an example of a photoautotroph? • A) cyanobacteria in freshwater and marine ecosystems • B) kelp in an underwater forest • C) herbs like thyme and basil • D) fungi • E) algae • The energy that excites P680 and P700 is supplied by A) electrons passing down the electron transport chain. B) the breaking of glucose bonds. C) ATP. D) photons. E) NADPH.