1 / 28

Photosynthesis

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.

lynch
Download Presentation

Photosynthesis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 6 Photosynthesis

  2. 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

  3. 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.

  4. 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.

  5. 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.

  6. Pigments • is a material that changes the color of reflected or transmitted light as the result of wavelength absorption.

  7. 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

  8. Photosynthetic Pigments • Chlorophyll A • chlorophyll B • Accessory pigments: • Carotenoids • Each pigment absorbs a particular wavelength of light in the visible spectrum

  9. 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.

  10. Pigment Absorption

  11. 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.

  12. 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.

  13. 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.

  14. CHEMIOSMOSIS- the movement of H+ protons out of the membrane to make ATP

  15. 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.

  16. CALVIN CYCLE or C3 pathway Occurs in the stroma

  17. The Calvin Cycle

  18. STEP 1 CARBON FIXATIONCO2 molecules enter and combine with RUBP (5 carbon) molecule to make a 6 carbon molecule– “will happen 3 times”

  19. STEP 2 – New 6 carbon molecule quickly splits into 2 (3carbon molecules) (PGA)- energy is used to add phosphate and create PGAL

  20. 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

  21. STEP 3- Some parts of the PGAL molecule leave the cycle- some stay to make more RuBP

  22. Step 3 (cont)- Used energy molecules- can return to electron transport chain

More Related