Photosynthesis involves two main stages: the light-dependent reactions where light energy is captured and converted to chemical energy in the form of ATP and NADPH, and the light-independent Calvin cycle where carbon dioxide is fixed into organic compounds like glucose using the energy from the light reactions. Chloroplasts are the organelles where photosynthesis takes place, containing chlorophyll and other pigments to absorb light as well as thylakoid membranes where the light reactions occur and generate ATP and NADPH. The Calvin cycle then uses these products to reduce carbon dioxide into three-carbon sugar molecules like glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate.
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Photosynthesis
Photosynthesis involves two main stages: the light-dependent reactions where light energy is captured and converted to chemical energy in the form of ATP and NADPH, and the light-independent Calvin cycle where carbon dioxide is fixed into organic compounds like glucose using the energy from the light reactions. Chloroplasts are the organelles where photosynthesis takes place, containing chlorophyll and other pigments to absorb light as well as thylakoid membranes where the light reactions occur and generate ATP and NADPH. The Calvin cycle then uses these products to reduce carbon dioxide into three-carbon sugar molecules like glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate.
• Plants use light energy from the sun to convert carbon dioxide and water into organic molecules. • Photoautotrophs, or producers of the biosphere, are the ultimate source of organic molecules for most organisms. • The diversity among today's photoautotrophs includes plants on land, algae and some protists, and photosynthetic prokaryotes in aquatic environments. • The ability of these organelles to harness light energy is attributed to the structural organization and interactions of their parts.
Photosynthesis in Chloroplasts in Plant Cells
• Chloroplasts are found in all green parts of a plant, with leaves being the major sites of photosynthesis. • Chlorophyll, a light-absorbing pigment in chloroplasts, converts solar energy to chemical energy.
Photosynthesis Process and Isotopes
• Photosynthesis involves the conversion of light energy into chemical energy, used in the stroma of the chloroplast to produce sugar. • Each mesophyll cell has about 30 to 40 chloroplasts, which form the framework for many reactions. The structure of a chloroplast... • The chloroplast contains an envelope of two membranes, an inner compartment filled with a thick fluid called stroma, and a system of interconnected membranous sacs called thylakoids. • The thylakoid membranes house chlorophyll molecules that capture light energy and convert it to chemical energy. • The Calvin cycle, a cyclic pathway that produces sugar from CO2, was elucidated using radioactive C-14 in the mid-1940s. • The overall process of photosynthesis has been known since the 1800s, but C. B. van Niel challenged this idea in the 1930s. • Photosynthesis and cellular respiration are opposite reactions, with reactants in one being products of the other. • Photosynthesis involves splitting water, transferring electrons to CO2, reducing it to sugar, and increasing the potential energy of electrons.
Photosynthesis and the Calvin Cycle Overview
Calvin Cycle Overview... • The Calvin cycle is a series of reactions in chloroplast stroma that assembles sugar molecules using CO2 and light reactions. • Carbon fixation involves incorporating carbon from CO2 into organic compounds, which are then reduced to sugars. • Light reactions produce NADPH, which provides electrons for reducing carbon compounds in the Calvin cycle. • ATP from light reactions provides the chemical energy that powers several steps of the Calvin cycle.
Photosynthesis: Using Light to Make Food
The Light Reaction... • Light reactions in the thylakoids convert light energy to chemical energy and release O2. • Light energy is used to drive the transfer of electrons from water to the electron acceptor NADP+, reducing it to NADPH. • NADPH temporarily stores electrons and provides "reducing power" to the Calvin cycle. Photosynthetic Pigments... • Light-absorbing molecules called pigments absorb some wavelengths of light and reflect or transmit other wavelengths. • Different pigments absorb light of different wavelengths, and chloroplasts contain more than one type of pigment. • Chlorophyll a, chlorophyll b, and carotenoids are pigments that broaden the spectrum of colors that can drive photosynthesis.
Light Energy and Its Transformation...
• Light energy can be transferred or transformed to other types of energy. • Pigment molecules absorb light, causing an electron to jump from a ground state to an excited state. • The excited state can be converted back to the ground state, releasing excess energy as heat. • Some pigments, like chlorophyll, emit light and heat after absorbing photons. • Fluorescence, a reddish afterglow produced by chlorophyll, is a process where an absorbed photon boosts an electron of chlorophyll to an excited state, then drops back to the ground state, emitting its energy as heat and light. • Chlorophyll molecules are organized into photosystems in the thylakoid membrane. • Two types of photosystems, photosystem I and photosystem II, cooperate in light reactions to generate ATP and NADPH. • The synthesis of ATP is linked to an electron transport chain pumping H+ into a membrane compartment, from which the ions flow through an ATP synthase embedded in the membrane. • The electrons moving through the photosystems to NADPH originate from water, which is split into 2 electrons, 2 hydrogen ions (H+), and 1 oxygen atom (1.2 O2).
Understanding Chemiosmosis and Light Reactions in Chlorophyll...
• Chemiosmosis uses the potential energy of a concentration gradient of H+ across a membrane to power ATP synthesis. • Light reactions within chloroplast thylakoid membranes produce NADPH and ATP.
Calvin Cycle: Sugar Synthesis in Chlorophyll
• Functions like a sugar factory within a chloroplast, using CO2, ATP and NADPH as inputs. • ATP is used as an energy source, while NADPH provides high-energy electrons for reducing CO2 to sugar. • Output is an energy-rich, three-carbon sugar, glyceraldehyde 3- phosphate (G3P), used to make glucose, the disaccharide sucrose, and other organic molecules. • The starting material is a five-carbon sugar named ribulose bisphosphate (RuBP), which must be regenerated after three cycles.
Carbon Fixation in Hot, Dry Climates
• C3 Plants: Use CO2 directly from the air, reducing water loss and preventing dehydration. • C4 Plants: Fix CO2 into a four-carbon compound, conserving water by keeping stomata mostly closed during hot and dry weather. • CAM Plants: Conserve water by opening stomata and only admitting CO2 at night. C4 Plants and Calvin Cycle • Carbon fixation and the Calvin cycle occur in different cell types in C4 plants. • All plants use the Calvin cycle to make sugar from CO2. • C4 and CAM pathways minimize photorespiration and maximize photosynthesis in hot, dry climates. • C4 plants have evolved alternate modes of carbon fixation to minimize photorespiration and optimize the Calvin cycle in hot, dry climates. • They first fix CO2 into a four-carbon compound and keep their stomata mostly closed to conserve water in hot and dry weather. • C4 plants use two types of cells: mesophyll cells and bundle-sheath cells. • An enzyme in the mesophyll cells has a high affinity for CO2 and can fix carbon even when the CO2 concentration in the leaf is low. • The resulting four-carbon compound acts as a CO2 shuttle and moves into bundle-sheath cells, which release CO2. • This maintains a high enough concentration of CO2 in the bundle • sheath cells for the Calvin cycle to make sugars and avoid photorespiration. • Corn and sugarcane are examples of agriculturally important C4 plants.
Photosynthesis: From Photons to Food
• Photosynthesis is a process where light reactions occur in thylakoid membranes, capturing solar energy and energizing electrons in chlorophyll molecules. • About 50% of the carbohydrates made by photosynthesis are consumed as fuel for cellular respiration in plant cells. • Sugars also serve as starting material for making other organic molecules, such as a plant’s proteins and lipids. • Plants and other photosynthesizers provide food and O2 for almost all living organisms and store the excess as starch.
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