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Chapter 6: Photosynthesis

Chapter 6: Photosynthesis. How Plants Make Food and the Importance of Captured Energy. Historical Perspective. Life started on this planet about 3 ½ billion years ago, but without photosynthesis it would not have thrived.

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Chapter 6: Photosynthesis

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  1. Chapter 6:Photosynthesis How Plants Make Food and the Importance of Captured Energy

  2. Historical Perspective • Life started on this planet about 3 ½ billion years ago, but without photosynthesis it would not have thrived. • Cyanobacteria (formerly called blue-green algae) were the first simple organisms to master photosynthesis. Later, these evolved into the chloroplasts of plants. • Photosynthesis profoundly changed the planet. The carbon-dioxide and ammonia rich atmosphere slowly changed to an oxygen /nitrogen atmosphere, poisoning many of the original organisms, but providing a new, more efficient way of releasing energy for the survivors. • The oxygen also produced a thin layer of ozone (O3) above the atmosphere, that protected us from solar radiation, and paved the way for organisms to live on land.

  3. Plants use these things to make food: • Water (H2O) • Carbon Dioxide (CO2) • Energy (from sunlight) • Chlorophyll (a green pigment that acts as an organic catalyst: C55H72O5N4Mg) • Overall reaction: 6 CO2 + 6 H2O + light → C6H12O6 + 6 02 Glucose (a simple sugar)

  4. Chloroplast Read- don't copy • Part of a plant cell where photosynthesis takes place. • Contains: • Outer Membrane • Inner Membrane • Stroma (fluid) • Thylakoids • Chlorophyll Chloroplast Plant cells (stained) See Diagram on Page 112

  5. Predefining terms Do not copy! Thylakoid • A Thylakoid is a small, flat disk or sac inside a chloroplast. Several thylakoids stacked together make a granum (pl. grana) • The surface of thylakoids is where most of the LIGHT reactions in photosynthesis take place.

  6. Electron Micrograph of Thylakoid

  7. Stroma Read- don't copy • The fluid inside the chloroplast, but outside of the thylakoids. • The reactions of the Calvin Cycle occur in the stroma.

  8. Pigment Read- don't copy • A pigment is a coloured compound • Pigments capture certain colours of light • The most important pigments in plant cells are: • Chlorophyll-a (green primary pigment) • Chlorophyll-b (blue-green accessory pigment) • Carotenoids (yellow, orange and brown accessory pigments)

  9. ATP Read- don't copy • Adenosine triphospate • Important energy-releasing compound • Breaks down into ADP and phosphate

  10. NADP, NADPH Read- don't copy • Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide Phosphate • This chemical compound transfers hydrogen ions (protons) from place to place • When its not carrying the hydrogen its called NADP, When it is carrying hydrogen it is NADPH

  11. RuBP • Ribulose biphosphate • A simple sugar (monosaccharide) • Has only 5 carbon atoms (glucose has 6) • Used in photosynthesis

  12. PGA, PGAL • Phospho-glyceric acid, Phosphoglyceraldehyde • Simple organic compounds • They have only 3 carbon atoms • They can be used to make sugars (like glucose)

  13. Get Ready to Start Your Notes Chapter Heading Chapter 6: Photosynthesis

  14. Photosynthesis • Photosynthesis is the process by which plants convert the energy of sunlight into chemical energy in organic compounds • Carbon dioxide and water are “fixed”, or joined together to make simple sugars (eg. Glucose) This is a fancy way of saying that plants make their own food

  15. Diagram Overview of Photosynthesis The process by which plants make their own food… Sunlight is absorbed Electrons are transported Water molecules are split Oxygen is released Hydrogen is retained as NADP•H 1 where Light Reactions is called Photosynthesis Consists of Goes to next step 2 where Calvin Cycle Carbon dioxide taken in CO2 is joined to other molecules. PGAL is made. output input Water Sunlight CO2 oxygen glucose (food) makes Glucose (food)

  16. Main Steps in Photosynthesis • The Light Reactions • The parts of photosynthesis that require sunlight and water. Oxygen is produced • The Calvin Cycle(A.K.A. the Dark Reactions) • The parts of photosynthesis that can take place with or without sunlight. Carbon dioxide is fixed or converted into organic compounds.

  17. The Light Reactions • Absorption of Light by Chlorophyll • Light energy excites a chlorophyll-a electron • Electron Transport • Excited electrons pass from molecule to molecule through the thylakoid membrane. • Water molecules are split: • 2 H20 → 4 H+ + 4 e- + O2 oxygen is released • Chemiosmosis -- H+ is used to make: • NADPH (NADP + H+→ NADPH) • ATP (ADP + P → ATP)

  18. The Calvin Cycle(formerly called The Dark Reactions) • CO2 is bonded to RuBP (a 5-Carbon sugar) • This splits into 2 PGA (a 3-Carbon acid) • The 2 PGAs are converted to PGALs • ATP is used up (it gives up its phosphate) • NADPH is used (it gives its hydrogens) • Most of the PGAL is converted into RuBP to restart the cycle, but… • Some PGAL is used to make organiccompounds (like glucose)

  19. Calvin Cycle CO2 • 6 carbon dioxide molecules join 6 RuBP molecules • 6 unstable six-carbon sugars form • They immediately split into 12 PGAs • The PGAs transform into 12 PGALs (using up ATP + NADPH from light reactions) • 10 PGALs are used to make 6 RuBPs • 2 PGALs are used to make glucose Unstable 6-C PGA PGA RuBP RuBP PGAL PGAL GLUCOSE START CYCLE AGAIN END

  20. Calvin Cycle CO2 • 6 carbon dioxide molecules join 6 RuBP molecules • 6 unstable six-carbon sugars form • They immediately split into 12 PGAs • The PGAs transform into 12 PGALs (using up ATP + NADPH from light reactions) • 10 PGALs are used to make 6 RuBPs • 2 PGALs are used to make glucose Unstable 6-C PGA PGA RuBP PGAL PGAL START CYCLE AGAIN END

  21. Overall Equation for Photosynthesis: • 6 CO2 + 6 H2O + light → C6H12O6 + 6 02 Which means that: • 6 carbon dioxide molecules, plus • 6 water molecules, with • enough sunlight, produces • One molecule of glucose. • 6 molecules of oxygen. Important!

  22. Other Pathways • The notes on photosynthesis describe the most common form… C3 photosynthesis. Plants that grow in hot, dry places use variations of photosynthesis. • C4 photosynthesis occurs in corn, sugar cane and crabgrass. • CAM photosynthesis occurs in cactus and pineapple.

  23. Follow up Activities • Draw the Calvin Cycle diagram (p. 117) in your notebook • Skim pages 111-120 in the textbook, looking particularly at the diagrams • Carefully read the Summaries (page 121)

  24. Leaf structure

  25. Palisade Layer (lots of photosynthesis) AKA: vascular bundle Spongy Layer (some photosynthesis) Epidermis Layer (no photosynthesis) Plural: stomata

  26. Assignment • Page 122 #1 - 22

  27. Photosynthesis • The Light Reactions , showing photosystems • The Calvin Cycle.

  28. AnswersPage 122 #1 to 22

  29. Chlorophyll is well named because chloro- means green and chlorophyll is a green pigment. 2 Stroma is the liquid inside a chloroplast, stomata (s. stoma) are the small holes or pores on the underside of leaves.

  30. 3 Carbon fixation means taking carbon dioxide from the air and incorporating it into more complex organic compounds, like sugar 4 A biochemical pathway is a series of linked reactions, where the product of one reaction is used by the next reaction. 5 Calvin cycle does not belong, because the others are all part of the light reactions.

  31. (a) O2 is a product, the others are used up. • (c) CO2 is a reactant in the Calvin cycle. • (b) accessory pigments absorb colours of light that chlorophyll a doesn’t. • (d) C4 plants fix CO2 into 4-carbon compounds • (c) Oxygen is produced when water is split.

  32. (d) Light reactions take place on the thylakoid membrane • (a) During chemiosmosis ATP is formed • (c) Carbon fixation occurs during the Calvin cycle, not during the light reactions. • (b) most of the PGAL is recycled to make more RUBP and keep the cycle going. • (b) most of the Calvin cycle occurs in the stroma

  33. Photosystem II is the starting point where sunlight causes chlorophyll-a to lose electrons. These electrons move through a transport chain to Photosystem I, where more light is absorbed and more electrons are released. The electrons are eventually replaced by electrons from water molecules that have been split. • The Calvin cycle is a biochemical pathway, because each time a substance is formed as a product of one reaction, it is immediately used as a reactant in another reaction.

  34. Most CAM plants are found in hot, dry climates, where plants need to keep their stomata closed during the day, and only open them at night. • ATP is synthesized during the step called chemiosmosis, when H+ ions are diffusing through the membrane. They provide energy to put together the ATP

  35. 20 During the summer the leaves are rich in chlorophyll, which is bright green and masks most other pigments. In the fall the chlorophyll production stops and the chlorophyll begins to disappear, leaving behind other pigments (like yellow and orange carotenoids). Note: In some plants the decaying pigments may also produce bright red colours

  36. The structure of a chloroplast is well suited to its function. The chloroplast contains many thylakoids that provide lots of membrane surface for reactions to occur on. These membranes also contain chlorophyll and other pigments to absorb different colours of light. The chloroplasts contain fluids (stroma) where other reactions can occur.

  37. 22. In the Calvin cycle (1) CO2 combines with RuBP to form an unstable 6C sugar. This immediately breaks into two PGA molecules. The PGAL molecules are immediately changed into PGAL molecules (using up some NADH an ATP). Most of the PGAL is used to replace the RuBP, but some of it is changed into glucose.

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