280 likes | 363 Views
Chapter 6. Photosynthesis. BIOCHEMICAL PATHWAY. Defined as--are series of chemical reactions occurring within a cell . In each pathway, a principal chemical is modified by chemical reactions . Because of the many chemicals that may be involved, pathways can be quite elaborate.
E N D
Chapter 6 Photosynthesis
BIOCHEMICAL PATHWAY Defined as--are series of chemical reactions occurring within a cell. • In each pathway, a principal chemical is modified by chemical reactions. • Because of the many chemicals that may be involved, pathways can be quite elaborate
Metabolism Defined as--is a step-by-step modification of the initial molecule to shape it into another product. The result can be used in one of three ways: • To be stored by the cell • To be used immediately, as a metabolic product • To initiate another metabolic pathway, called a flux generating step.
Photosynthesis in Overview • Process by which plants and other autotrophs store the energy of sunlight into sugars. • Requires sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide. • Overall equation: 6 CO2 + 6 H20 C6H12O6 + 6 O2 • Occurs in the leaves of plants in organelles called chloroplasts.
Chloroplast Structure • Inner membrane called the thylakoid membrane. • Thickened regions called thylakoids. A stack of thylakoids is called a granum. (Plural – grana) • Stroma is a liquid surrounding the thylakoids.
Pigments • is a material that changes the color of reflected or transmitted light as the result of wavelength absorption.
VISIBLE SPECTRUM • is the portion of the electromagnetic spectrum that is visible to (can be detected by) the human eye. • this range of wavelengths is called visible light or simply light. • Primary colors include R O Y G B I V
Photosynthetic Pigments • Chlorophyll A • chlorophyll B • Accessory pigments: • Carotenoids • Each pigment absorbs a particular wavelength of light in the visible spectrum
Pigments • Chlorophyll A is the most important photosynthetic pigment. • Other pigments called antenna or accessory pigments are also present in the leaf. • Chlorophyll B • Carotenoids (orange / red) • Xanthophylls (yellow / brown) • These pigments are embedded in the membranes of the chloroplast in groups called photosystems.
Photosynthesis: The Chemical Process • Occurs in two main phases. • Light reactions • Dark reactions (aka – the Calvin Cycle) • Light reactions are the “photo” part of photosynthesis. Light is absorbed by pigments. • Dark reactions are the “synthesis” part of photosynthesis. Trapped energy from the sun is converted to the chemical energy of sugars.
Step I: Light Reactions • Light-dependent reactions occur on the thylakoid membranes. • Involves the splitting of water (photolysis) • 12 H2O + Energy 6O2 + 24 H+ + 24e- • Requires light for the energy to split the water molecule • Energy storage molecules are formed. (ATP and NADPH) • Oxygen gas is made as a waste product.
Dark Reactions • Dark reactions (light-independent) occur in the stroma. • Carbon dioxide is “fixed” into the sugar glucose. • ATP and NADPH molecules created during the light reactions power the production of this glucose.
CHEMIOSMOSIS- the movement of H+ protons out of the membrane to make ATP
Step II: Dark ReactionsLight Independent • Does not require light but can happen at any time of day. • The energy from NADPH and ATP is used for carbon fixation • 6 CO2 + 24 H+ + 24 e- ------> C6H12O6 + 6 H2O • The chemical bonds present in glucose also contain a considerable amount of stored (potential) energy.
CALVIN CYCLE or C3 pathway Occurs in the stroma
STEP 1 CARBON FIXATIONCO2 molecules enter and combine with RUBP (5 carbon) molecule to make a 6 carbon molecule– “will happen 3 times”
STEP 2 – New 6 carbon molecule quickly splits into 2 (3carbon molecules) (PGA)- energy is used to add phosphate and create PGAL
Rubisco P G A P G A RuBp CO2 Later becomes glucose! Rubisco P G A RuBp O2 Photorespiration – these CO2’s did not get incorporated into glucose this time! CO2 CO2
STEP 3- Some parts of the PGAL molecule leave the cycle- some stay to make more RuBP
Step 3 (cont)- Used energy molecules- can return to electron transport chain