almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

43
Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists Autotrophs generate their own organic matter through photosynthesis Sunlight energy is transformed to energy stored in the form of chemical bonds a) Mosses, ferns, and flowering plants (b) Kelp (c) Euglena (d) Cyanobacteria THE BASICS OF PHOTOSYNTHESIS

Upload: vangie

Post on 17-Jan-2016

35 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

THE BASICS OF PHOTOSYNTHESIS. Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists. Autotrophs generate their own organic matter through photosynthesis Sunlight energy is transformed to energy stored in the form of chemical bonds. (c) Euglena. (d) Cyanobacteria. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

• Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists– Autotrophs generate their own organic matter through

photosynthesis– Sunlight energy is transformed to energy stored in the

form of chemical bonds

(a) Mosses, ferns, andflowering plants

(b) Kelp

(c) Euglena (d) Cyanobacteria

THE BASICS OF PHOTOSYNTHESIS

Page 2: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

Light Energy Harvested by Plants & Other Photosynthetic Autotrophs

6 CO2 + 6 H2O + light energy → C6H12O6 + 6 O2

Page 3: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

WHYWHY ARE ARE PLA PLANTS NTS GREGREEN?EN?

Plant Cells have Green Chloroplasts

The thylakoid membrane of the chloroplast is impregnated with photosynthetic pigments (i.e., chlorophylls, carotenoids).

Page 4: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

• Chloroplasts absorb light energy and convert it to chemical energy

LightReflected

light

Absorbedlight

Transmittedlight

Chloroplast

THE COLOR OF LIGHT SEEN IS THE COLOR NOT ABSORBED

Page 5: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

• Photosynthesis is the process by which autotrophic organisms use light energy to make sugar and oxygen gas from carbon dioxide and water

AN OVERVIEW OF PHOTOSYNTHESIS

Carbondioxide

Water Glucose Oxygengas

PHOTOSYNTHESIS

Page 6: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

• The Calvin cycle makes sugar from carbon dioxide– ATP generated by the light

reactions provides the energy for sugar synthesis

– The NADPH produced by the light reactions provides the electrons for the reduction of carbon dioxide to glucose

LightChloroplast

Lightreactions

Calvincycle

NADP

ADP+ P

• The light reactions convert solar energy to chemical energy– Produce ATP & NADPH

AN OVERVIEW OF PHOTOSYNTHESIS

Page 7: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

PHOTOSYNTHESIS

• Sunlight provides ENERGY

CO2 + H2O produces Glucose + Oxygen

6CO2 + 6H2OC6H12O6 + 6O2

Page 8: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

Steps of Photosynthesis

• Light hits reaction centers of chlorophyll, found in chloroplasts

• Chlorophyll vibrates and causes water to break apart.

• Oxygen is released into air• Hydrogen remains in chloroplast

attached to NADPH

• “THE LIGHT REACTION”

Page 9: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

Steps of Photosynthesis

• The DARK Reactions= Calvin Cycle

• CO2 from atmosphere is joined to H from water molecules (NADPH) to form glucose

• Glucose can be converted into other molecules with yummy flavors!

Page 10: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

• In most plants, photosynthesis occurs primarily in the leaves, in the chloroplasts

• A chloroplast contains: – stroma, a fluid – grana, stacks of thylakoids

• The thylakoids contain chlorophyll– Chlorophyll is the green pigment that captures

light for photosynthesis

Photosynthesis occurs in chloroplasts

Page 11: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

• The location and structure of chloroplasts

LEAF CROSS SECTION MESOPHYLL CELL

LEAF

Chloroplast

Mesophyll

CHLOROPLAST Intermembrane space

Outermembrane

Innermembrane

ThylakoidcompartmentThylakoidStroma

Granum

StromaGrana

Page 12: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

• Chloroplasts contain several pigments

Chloroplast Pigments

– Chlorophyll a – Chlorophyll b – Carotenoids– Xanthophyll

Figure 7.7

Page 13: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

Chlorophyll a & b•Chl a has a methyl group •Chl b has a carbonyl group

Porphyrin ring delocalized e-

Phytol tail

Page 14: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

Different pigments absorb light differently

Page 15: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

Cyclic Photophosphorylation • Process for ATP generation associated with

some Photosynthetic Bacteria• Reaction Center => 700 nm

Page 16: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

Ph

oto

n

Ph

oto

n

Water-splittingphotosystem

NADPH-producingphotosystem

ATPmill

• Two types of photosystems cooperate in the light reactions

Page 17: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

Primaryelectron acceptor

Primaryelectron acceptor

Electron transport chain

Electron transport

Photons

PHOTOSYSTEM I

PHOTOSYSTEM II

Energy forsynthesis of

by chemiosmosis

Noncyclic Photophosphorylation • Photosystem II regains electrons by splitting

water, leaving O2 gas as a by-product

Page 18: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

• The O2 liberated by photosynthesis is made from the oxygen in water (H+ and e-)

Plants produce OPlants produce O22 gas by splitting H gas by splitting H22OO

Page 19: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

• Two connected photosystems collect photons of light and transfer the energy to chlorophyll electrons

• The excited electrons are passed from the primary electron acceptor to electron transport chains– Their energy ends up in ATP and NADPH

In the light reactions, electron transport In the light reactions, electron transport chains generate ATP, NADPH, & Ochains generate ATP, NADPH, & O22

Page 20: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

• The electron transport chains are arranged with the photosystems in the thylakoid membranes and pump H+ through that membrane– The flow of H+ back through the membrane is

harnessed by ATP synthase to make ATP– In the stroma, the H+ ions combine with NADP+

to form NADPH

Chemiosmosis powers ATP synthesis in the light reactions

Page 21: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

2 H + 1/2

Water-splittingphotosystem

Reaction-center

chlorophyll

Light

Primaryelectronacceptor

Energyto make

Electron transport chain

Primaryelectronacceptor

Primaryelectronacceptor

NADPH-producingphotosystem

Light

NADP

1

23

How the Light Reactions Generate ATP and NADPH

Page 22: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists
Page 23: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

• The production of ATP by chemiosmosis in photosynthesis

Thylakoidcompartment(high H+)

Thylakoidmembrane

Stroma(low H+)

Light

Antennamolecules

Light

ELECTRON TRANSPORT CHAIN

PHOTOSYSTEM II PHOTOSYSTEM I ATP SYNTHASE

Page 24: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

Summary—Light Dependent Reactions

a. Overall inputlight energy, H2O.

b. Overall output ATP, NADPH, O2.

Page 25: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists
Page 26: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

• Animation is of the Calvin Cycle Note what happens to the carbon dioxide and what the end product is.

• Second animation of the Calvin Cycle is very clear and even does the molecular bookkeeping for you.

Page 27: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

Light Independent Reactions aka Calvin Cycle

Carbon from CO2 is converted to glucose

(ATP and NADPH drive the reduction

of CO2 to C6H12O6.)

Page 28: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

Light Independent Reactions aka Calvin Cycle

CO2 is added to the 5-C sugar RuBP by the enzyme rubisco.

This unstable 6-C compound splits to two molecules of PGA or 3-phosphoglyceric acid.

PGA is converted to Glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate (G3P), two of which bond to form glucose.

G3P is the 3-C sugar formed by three turns of the cycle.

Page 29: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

Summary—Light Independent Reactions

a. Overall input CO2, ATP, NADPH.

b. Overall output glucose.

Page 30: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

Review: Photosynthesis uses light energy to make food molecules

Light

Chloroplast

Photosystem IIElectron transport

chains Photosystem I

CALVIN CYCLE Stroma

Electrons

LIGHT REACTIONS CALVIN CYCLE

Cellular respiration

Cellulose

Starch

Other organic compounds

• A summary of the chemical processes of photosynthesis

Page 31: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

Types of Photosynthesis

C3

C4

CAM

Rubisco: the world’s busiest enzyme!

Page 32: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

Competing Reactions

• Rubisco grabs CO2, “fixing” it into a carbohydrate in the light independent reactions.

• O2 can also react with rubisco, inhibiting its active site– not good for glucose output– wastes time and energy (occupies

Rubisco)

Page 33: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

Photorespiration

• When Rubisco reacts with O2 instead of CO2

• Occurs under the following conditions:– Intense Light (high O2 concentrations)

– High heat

• Photorespiration is estimated to reduce photosynthetic efficiency by 25%

Page 34: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

Why high heat?• When it is hot, plants close their

stomata to conserve water

• They continue to do photosynthesis use up CO2 and produce O2 creates high O2 concentrations inside the plant photorespiration occurs

Page 35: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

C4 Photosynthesis

• Certain plants have developed ways to limit the amount of photorespiration – C4 Pathway*– CAM Pathway*

* Both convert CO2 into a 4 carbon intermediate C4 Photosynthesis

Page 36: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

Leaf Anatomy

• In C3 plants (those that do C3 photosynthesis), all processes occur in the mesophyll cells.

Image taken without permission from http://bcs.whfreeman.com/thelifewire|

Mesophyll cells

Bundle sheath cells

Page 37: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

C4 Pathway

• In C4 plants photosynthesis occurs in both the mesophyll and the bundle sheath cells.

Image taken without permission from http://bcs.whfreeman.com/thelifewire|

Page 38: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

C4 Pathway

• CO2 is fixed into a 4-

carbon intermediate

• Has an extra enzyme– PEP Carboxylase that initially traps CO2

instead of Rubisco– makes a 4 carbon intermediate

Page 39: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

C4 Pathway

• The 4 carbon intermediate is “smuggled” into the bundle sheath cell

• The bundle sheath cell is not very permeable to CO2

• CO2 is released from the 4C malate goes through the Calvin Cycle

C3 Pathway

Page 40: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

How does the C4 Pathway limit photorespiration?

• Bundle sheath cells are far from the surface– less O2 access

• PEP Carboxylase doesn’t have an affinity for O2 allows plant to collect a lot of CO2 and concentrate it in the bundle sheath cells (where Rubisco is)

Page 41: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

CAM Pathway

• Fix CO2 at night and

store as a 4 carbon molecule

• Keep stomates closed during day to prevent water loss

• Same general process as C4 Pathway

Page 42: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

How does the CAM Pathway limit photorespiration?

• Collects CO2 at night so that it can be more concentrated during the day

• Plant can still do the calvin cycle during the day without losing water

Page 43: Almost all plants are photosynthetic autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists

Summary of C4 Photosynthesis

• C4 Pathway– Separates by

space (different locations)

• CAM Pathway– Separates

reactions by time (night versus day)