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Chapter 15 (part1) Photosynthesis Implications of Photosynthesis on Evolution Implications of Photosynthesis on Biochemistry? • • • • • • Energy metabolism Carbohydrate metabolism Amino acid metabolism Lipid Metabolism Nucleic acid metabolism Oxygen toxicity The Sun - Ultimate Energy • 1.5 x 1022 kJ falls on the earth each day • 1% is absorbed by photosynthetic organisms and transformed into chemical energy • 6CO2 + 6H2O C6H12O6 + 6O2 • 1011 tons (!) of CO2 are fixed globally per year • Formation of sugar from CO2 and water requires energy • Sunlight is the energy source! Photosynthesis: Light Reactions and Carbon Fixation • The light reactions capture light energy and convert it to chemical energy in the form of reducing potential (NADPH) and ATP with evolution of oxygen • During carbon fixation (dark reactions) NADPH and ATP are used to drive the endergonic process of hexose sugar formation from CO2 in a series of reactions in the stroma Light: H2O + ADP + Pi + NADP+ + light O2 + ATP + NADPH + H+ CF: CO2 + ATP + NADPH + H+ Glucose + ADP + Pi + NADP+ Sum: CO2 + light Glucose + O2 Chloroplast • Inner and outer membrane = similar to mitochondria, but no ETC in inner membrane. • Thylakoids = internal membrane system. Organized into stromal and granal lammellae. • Thylakoid membrane - contains photosynthetic ETC • Thylakoid Lumen – aqueous interior of thylkoid. Protons are pumped into the lumen for ATP synthesis • Stroma – “cytoplasm” of chloroplast. Contains carbon fixation machinery. • Chloroplasts possess DNA, RNA and ribosomes Conversion of Light Energy to Chemical Energy • Light is absorbed by photoreceptor molecules (Chlorophylls, carotenoids) • Light absorbed by photoreceptor molecules excite an electron from its ground state (low energy) orbit to a excited state (higher energy) orbit . • The high energy electron can then return to the ground state releasing the energy as heat or light or be transferred to an acceptor. • Results in (+)charged donor and (–)charged acceptor = charge separation • Charge separation occurs at photocenters. • Conversion of light NRG to chemical NRG Photosynthetic Pigments Chlorophyll • Photoreactive, isoprenebased pigment • A planar, conjugated ring system - similar to porphyrins • Mg in place of iron in the center • Long chain phytol group confers membrane solubility • Aromaticity makes chlorophyll an efficient absorber of light • Two major forms in plants Chl A and Chl B Accessory Pigments Carotenoid Phycobilin • Absorb light through conjugated double bond system • Absorb light at different wavelengths than Chlorophyll • Broaden range of light absorbed Absorption Spectra of Major Photosynthetic Pigments Harvesting of Light and Transfer of Energy to Photosystems • Light is absorbed by “antenna pigments” and transferred to photosystems. • Photosystems contain special-pair chlorophyll molecules that undergo charge separation and donate e- to the photosynthetic ETC Resonance Transfer • Energy is transfer through antenna pigment system by resonance transfer not charge separation. • An electron in the excited state can transfer the energy to an adjacent molecule through electromagnetic interactions. • Acceptor and donor molecule must be separated by very small distances. • Rate of NRG transfer decreases by a factor of n6 (n= distance betwn) • Can only transfer energy to a donor of equal or lower energy Photosynthetic Electron Transport and Photophosphorylation • Analogous to respiratory ETC and oxidative phosphorylation • Light driven ETC generates a proton gradient which is used to provide energy for ATP production through a F1Fo type ATPase. • The photosynthetic ETC generates proton gradient across the thylakoid membrane. • Protons are pumped into the lumen space. • When protons exit the lumen and re-enter the stroma, ATP is produced through the F1Fo ATPase. Photosynthetic ETC Eukaryotic Photosystems • PSI (P700) and PSII (P680) • PSI and PSII contain special-pair chlorophylls • PSI absorbs at 700 nm and PSII absorbs at 680 nm • PSII oxidizes water (termed “photolysis") • PSI reduces NADP+ • ATP is generated by establishment of a proton gradient as electrons flow from PSII to PSI Z-Scheme Terminal Step in Photosynthetic ETC • Electrons are transferred from the last iron sulfur complex to ferredoxin. • Ferredoxin is a water soluble protein coenzyme • Very powerful reducing agent. • Ferredoxin is then used to reduce NADP+ to NADPH by ferredoxin-NADP+ oxidoreductase • So NADP+ is terminal e- accepter The Z Scheme • An arrangement of the electron carriers as a chain according to their standard reduction potentials • PQ = plastoquinone • PC = plastocyanin • "F"s = ferredoxins • Ao = a special chlorophyll a • A1 = a special PSI quinone • Cytochrome b6/cytochrome f complex is a proton pump P680(PSII) to PQ Pool Electrons are passed from Pheophytin to Plastoquinone • Plastoquinone is analagous to ubiquinone • Lipid soluble e- carrier • Can form stable semiquinone intermediate • Can transfer 2 electrons on at a time. Transfer of e- from PQH2 to Cytbf Complex (another Q-cycle) • Electrons must be transferred one at a time to Fe-S group. • Another Q-cycle • First PQH2 transfers one electron to Fe-S group, a PQformed. 2 H+ pumped into lumen • A second PQH2 transfers one electron to Fe-S group and the one to reduce the first PQ- to PQH2. 2 more H+ pumped into lumen • 4 protons pumped per PQH2. Since 2 PQH2 produced per O2 evolved 8 protons pumped Excitation, Oxidation and Re-reduction of P680 • Special pair chlorophyll in P680 (PS II) is excited by a photon • P680* transfer energy as a e- to pheophytin A through a charge separation step. • The oxidized P680+ is rereduced by e- derived from the oxidation of water Oxygen evolution by PSII • Requires the accumulation of four oxidizing equivalents • P680 has to be oxidized by 4 photons • 1 e- is removed in each of four steps before H2O is oxidized to O2 + 4H+ • Results in the accumulation of 4 H+ in lumen Kristina N. Ferreira, Tina M. Iverson, Karim Maghlaoui, James Barber, and So Iwata Science 19 March 2004: 1831-1838.