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Energy acquisition and biochemical pathways: Photosynthetic pathways (C 3 , C 4 , CAM). Questions. Lectures now posted on wiki Discussions: Mariana: posting paper and questions for this week Dilys: will be picking a paper to post for next week Any questions?. Ferns. Gymnosperms.
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Energy acquisition and biochemical pathways: Photosynthetic pathways (C3, C4, CAM)
Questions • Lectures now posted on wiki • Discussions: • Mariana: posting paper and questions for this week • Dilys: will be picking a paper to post for next week • Any questions?
Ferns Gymnosperms Angiosperms
Carbon dioxide uptake by plants • CO2 is • About 0.038% in atmosphere • What about inside leaves? • But remember CO2 uptake is in exchange for H2O loss. What about differences in water across the leaf surface?
RUBISCO • RUBISCO, drives • Carbon fixation in photosynthesis and releases oxygen (but has a low affinity for CO2), • Carbon release in photorespiration with oxygen as substrate.
Photosynthesis RuBP + CO2 2PGA Photorespiration RuBP + O2 glycolate • Photorespiration: No carbon fixed but glycolate can be used in amino acid synthesis
Photosynthetic strategies • Most plants (C3): fix carbon dioxide initially as phosphoglycerate (PGA), a three-carbon compound. • Enzyme is ribulose bi-phosphate carboxylase-oxidase (RUBISCO) • Biochemical cycle is called Calvin cycle.
But, if it is really hot and dry water uptake is a problem. What to do?
Hatch and Slack cycle • Some plants, mainly tropical grasses, C4: first combine carbon dioxide with phospho-enol-pyruvate (PEP), into a four carbon compound – oxaloacetate.
Crassulacean Acid Metabolism (CAM) • Third photosynthetic strategy (CAM): first found in plants in the family Crassulaceae and was therefore called Crassulacean Acid Metabolism. • Plants in other families also use this mode of carbon fixation (lots of succulents and epiphytes).
What do you think the main advantages and disadvantages of each strategy is?
Question • Why did C4 evolve in grasses? • Dogma: A response to rising temperatures and lowering CO2 • To test this, for 1230 grass spp, 1.1 million specimens • GBIF: georeference points • Climate: CRU (Climate Resource Unit) • DNA sequences: With PHLAWD, built a phylogeny • Chloroplast regions: atpB (59 taxa), matK (266 taxa), ndhF (437 taxa), rbcL (251 taxa), rpl16 (176 taxa), and trnL-trnF (810 taxa) • Nuclear regions: phyB (93 taxa) and the internal transcribed spacer (ITS; 753 taxa)
Ferns Gymnosperms Angiosperms
Poales Poaceae
Question • Why did C4 evolve in grasses? • Forget dogma: • Grasses were historically warm adapted • C4 evolution was in response to a drop in precipitation • So, the shift was probably from tropical rainforests understories to open tropical savannahs and grasslands!!! • The question then becomes, when, why, and how did C3 grasses evolve cold tolerance?