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Background on Maize and Photosynthesis. Corn or Maize – Zea mays. Typical Corn Growth. Typical ear of corn. Zea mays subsp. mexicana. Zea mays subsp. mays. Teosinte vs. Corn Growth. Teosinte Corn. Steps from Teosinte to Maize.
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Corn or Maize – Zea mays
Zea mays subsp. mexicana Zea mays subsp. mays
Teosinte vs. Corn Growth Teosinte Corn
Steps from Teosinte to Maize • Maize cobs do not shatter (fall apart) whereas teosinte ears shatter when mature • Each teosinte grain is netled in a hard, deep floral structure the cupule and covered by a hard sheath (the glume). The grains of corn are naked and held outside a collapsed cupule • Each teosintecupule contains a single fertile spikelet; maize cupules have two fertile spikelets • Teosinte cupules are arranged in 2 ranks (rows) but maize are in 4 to 10 rows • Teosinte has long primary branches that each ends in a male tassel and there are numerous tiny ears along each branch. Maize has short primary branches that end in a single ear – only a few ears per plant; male tassel at apex of plant
Variation in ear size and kernel color fromMexican landraces of corn
Teosinte – Zea diploperennis
Light and Dark Reactions • We shall see that the first, light-dependent stage of photosynthesis uses light energy to form ATP from ADP and to reduce electron carrier molecules, especially NADP+ to NADPH – so here energy is captured • In the light-independent reaction, the energy from the ATP and NADPH is used to build organic carbon molecules - and this is the process of carbon fixation
Light Spectrums • Absorption spectrum - the light absorption pattern of a pigment • Action spectrum - the relative effectiveness of different wavelengths for a specific light-requiring process - such as photosynthesis, flowering or phototropism
When pigments absorb light, electrons are temporarily boosted to a higher energy level One of three things may happen to that energy: 1. the energy may be dissipated as heat 2. the energy may be re-emitted almost instantly as light of a longer wavelength - this is called fluorescence 3. the energy may be captured by the formation of a chemical bond - as in photosynthesis
The Photosynthetic Pigments • Chlorophyll a - found in all photosynthetic eukaryotes and cyanobacteria - essential for photosynthesis in these organisms • Chlorophyll b - found in vascular plants, bryophytes, green algae and euglenoid algae - it is an accessory pigment • Carotenoids - red, orange or yellow fat-soluble accessory pigments found in all chloroplasts and cyanobacteria - caroteniods are embedded in thylakoids along with chlorophylls • Two types of carotenoids - carotenes and xanthophylls
Overview Of Photosynthesis
Melvin Calvin 1940s • Worked out the carbon-fixation pathway – now named for him • Won Nobel Prize in 1961
Calvin Cycle Summary • Each full turn of the Calvin cycle begins with entry of a CO2 molecule and ends when RuBP is regenerated - it takes 6 full turns of the Calvin cycle to generate a 6 carbon sugar such as glucose • the equation to produce a molecule of glucose is: • 6CO2 + 12NADPH + 12H+ + 18ATP => 1 Glucose + 12NADP + 6O2 + 18ADP + 18 Pi + 6H2O
C4 Pathway • In some plants the first carbon compound produced through the light-independent reactions is not the 3 carbon PGA, but rather is a 4 carbon molecule oxaloacetate • Leaves of C4 plants typically have very orderly arrangement of mesophyll around a layer of bundle sheath cells – called Kranz architecture • Mesophyll cell chloroplasts are small with lots of grana; bundle sheath cell chloroplasts are large with little grana
Why Use C4 Pathway? • Fixation of CO2 has a higher energetic cost in C4 plants than in C3 plants – it takes 5 ATP to fix one molecule of CO2 in C4 but only 3 ATP in C3 • For all C3 plants photosynthesis is always accompanied by photorespiration which consumes and releases CO2 in the presence of light - it wastes carbon fixed by photosynthesis - up to 50% of carbon fixed in photosynthesis may be used in photorespiration in C3 plants as fixed carbon is reoxidized to CO2 • Photorespiration is nearly absent in C4 plants - this is because a high CO2: low O2 concentration limits photorespiration - C4 plants essentially pump CO2 into bundle sheath cells thus maintaining high CO2 concentration in cells where Calvin cycle will occur • Thus net photosynthetic rates for C4 plants (corn, sorgham, sugarcane) are higher than in C3 relatives (wheat, rice, rye, oats)
CAM – Crassulacean Acid Metabolism • Crassulacean Acid Metabolism (CAM) has evolved independently in many plant families including the stoneworts (Crassulaceae) and cacti (Cactaceae) • Plants which carry out CAM have ability to fix CO2 in the dark (night) • so CAM plants, like C4 plants, use both C4 and C3 pathways, but CAM plants separate the cycles temporally and C4 plants separate them spatially • CAM plants typically open stomata at night and take in CO2 then, then close stomata during day and thus retard water loss