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Chapter 8Photosynthesis

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Autotrophs vs. HeterotrophsAutotrophs are organisms that can

make their own food◦Use light energy from the sun to

produce◦Plants are an example

Heterotrophs cannot use the sun’s energy directly◦Obtain energy from the foods they

eat◦Animals and mushrooms are

examples

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Autotrophs vs. Heterotrophs

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EnergyATP – Adenosine triphosphate – is the

molecule cells use to store and release energy. Be able to draw it. Energy is released when the bond is broken between the last two phosphates.

ADP – Adenosine diphosphateAMP – Adenosine monophosphate

Adenosine

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Energy

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EnergyAdding a phosphate group to ADP

allows the organism to store energy◦ATP is like a fully charged battery◦ADP is like a partially charged

battery

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EnergyEnergy is used for:1. Active transport: Na+ is pumped

out and K+ into the cell2. Motor proteins that move organelles3. Synthesis of proteins, nucleic acids,

lipids,…4. Produce light (firefly)5. Cell reproduction and more

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EnergyGlucose is better for long term

storage than ATPA single molecule of glucose stores 90

times the chemical energy of a molecule of ATP

Most cells only have a small amount of ATP, only enough to last for a few seconds of activity

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What is Photosynthesis?Photosynthesis is the process in

which light, water, and carbon dioxide (CO2) is made into sugar and oxygen (O2)

Carbon dioxide + water sugar + oxygen

6CO2 + 6H2O C6H12O6 + 6O2

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PhotosynthesisChlorophyll a

and Chlorophyll b are pigments in the chloroplast that absorb light of the visible spectrum, except for green light. They reflect green, thus the leaf looks green.

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PhotosynthesisPhotosynthesis takes place in the

chloroplasts◦Chloroplasts have stacks of

thylakoids (saclike photosynthetic membranes)

◦Proteins in thylakoids organize chlorophyll and other pigments into photosystems, which are the light-collecting units

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Light-dependent reactionsTake place in the thylakoid membranesConvert light energy to ATP and

NADPHSplit H2O and release O2

Electron transport chain connects the two photosystems to make an H+ gradient across the thylakoid membrane (ATP synthase uses this force to make ATP). Uses a proton (H+) pump.

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Light-dependent reactions

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Calvin cycle reactionsTake place in the stromaUse ATP and NADPH to convert CO2 to

sugarReturn ADP, inorganic phosphate, and

NADP+ to the light reactions

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Calvin cycle reactions

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Photosynthesis

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Factors affecting photosynthesis

Water (required raw material)◦Plants in dry climates have a waxy

coating to prevent water lossCO2 concentration (required raw

material)Temperature: enzymes function best

between 0o C and 35o CLight intensity

◦Plants can reach a maximum rate of photosynthesis with light intensity (varies between plant type)

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Chapter 9 Cellular Respiration

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Chemical EnergyHow much energy is in food?

◦One molecule of glucose contains 3811 calories of heat energy

◦A calorie is the amount of energy needed to raise the temperature of one gram of water one degree Celsius

◦The Calorie (food labels) is actually 1000 calories

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Chemical EnergyThe beginning of turning food into

energy is glycolysis (produces small amount of energy)

If oxygen is present 2 other pathways occur to produce more energy

If oxygen is not present, 1 different pathway occurs

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Energy PathwaysAerobic – requires oxygen

◦Also called cellular respirationAnaerobic – does not need oxygen

◦Fermentation – name for anaerobic pathway following glycolysis (if oxygen is not present). (The term fermentation includes glycolysis).

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What is Cellular Respiration?Cellular Respiration (video)Cellular respiration - the process

that releases energy by breaking down glucose and other food molecules in the presence of oxygen.

Glucose + oxygen carbon dioxide + water + energy

C6H12O6 + 6O2 6CO2 + 6H2O + ATP

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What is Cellular Respiration?

Carbondioxide

Water

Oxygen

Carbondioxide

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Cellular RespirationSteps of cellular respiration:1. Glycolysis – one glucose is broken in

half to make 2 pyruvic acids. Anaerobic. Occurs in cytoplasm.

2. Krebs cycle – pyruvic acid is broken down into CO2 and energy. Aerobic. Occurs in mitochondrion. Also called citric acid cycle.

3. Electron transport chain – using a series of proteins, the electrons from the Krebs Cycle and glycolysis to convert ADP to ATP.

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GlycolysisNADH passes energy from glucose to

the electron transport chain

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Energy PathwaysAerobic – requires oxygen

◦Also called cellular respirationAnaerobic – does not need oxygen

◦Fermentation – name for anaerobic pathway following glycolysis (if oxygen is not present). (The term fermentation includes glycolysis).

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FermentationTwo types of fermentation:Alcoholic fermentation: yeasts and

some bacteriaPyruvic acid + NADH alcohol + CO2 + NAD+

Lactic acid fermentation: most organisms including us and many bacteria

Pyruvic acid + NADH lactic acid + NAD+

Both processes regenerate NAD+

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Lactic Acid Fermentation

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Kreb’s Cycle and ETCDuring the Kreb’s cycle pyruvic acid is

down into carbon dioxide◦Occurs in the mitochondrion◦NADH and ATP is produced

In the electron transport chain (ETC) high energy electrons (NADH, FADH2) is converted into ATP◦Hydrogen ions are pumped across

membrane◦ATP synthase – enzyme (protein)

that makes ATP using H+ gradient

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Cellular Respiration1 glucose results in the production of

36 ATP net◦34 more ATP than anaerobic

processes◦38% of the total energy in glucose,

the other 62% is “lost” through heat◦More efficient than an automobile

(25%-30%) 70-75% is lost to heat

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Energy Pathway

Glycolysis

No Oxygen Oxygen

Anaerobic respiration Aerobic respiration

36 ATP2 ATP, lactate oralcohol and CO2

Fermentation Cellular respiration

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Cellular Respiration

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Cellular Respiration

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Energy Pathway

  Photosynthesis

Cellular Respiration

Fermentation

Function

Energy storage Energy release Energy release

Location

Chloroplasts Mitochondria Cytoplasm

Reactants

CO2 and H2O Glucose and O2 Glucose & NAD

Products

Glucose and O2 CO2 and H2O & ATP

Alcohol & CO2

& ATP orLactic acid & ATP

Comparing photosynthesis, cellular respiration, & fermentation:


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