photosynthesis chapter 5. outline i. photosynthesis a. introduction b. reactions

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Photosynthesis Chapter 5

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Page 1: Photosynthesis Chapter 5. Outline I. Photosynthesis A. Introduction B. Reactions

PhotosynthesisChapter 5

Page 2: Photosynthesis Chapter 5. Outline I. Photosynthesis A. Introduction B. Reactions

Outline

I. PhotosynthesisA. Introduction

B. Reactions

Page 3: Photosynthesis Chapter 5. Outline I. Photosynthesis A. Introduction B. Reactions

Photosynthesis

Method of converting sun energy into chemical energy usable by cells

Autotrophs: self feeders, organisms capable of making their own food– Photoautotrophs: use sun energy e.g. plants

photosynthesis-makes organic compounds (glucose) from light

– Chemoautotrophs: use chemical energy e.g. bacteria that use sulfide or methane chemosynthesis-makes organic compounds from chemical energy contained in sulfide or methane

Page 4: Photosynthesis Chapter 5. Outline I. Photosynthesis A. Introduction B. Reactions

Overall Reaction of Photosynthesis

6CO2 + 12 H2O + light

energy → C6H12O6 + 6O2+ 6H2O Carbohydrate made is glucose Water appears on both sides because 12 H2O molecules

are required and 6 new H2O molecules are made Water is split as a source of electrons from hydrogen

atoms releasing O2 as a byproduct Electrons increase potential energy when moved from

water to sugar therefore energy is required

Page 5: Photosynthesis Chapter 5. Outline I. Photosynthesis A. Introduction B. Reactions

Photosynthesis

Photosynthesis takes place in specialized structures inside plant cells called chloroplasts(Light absorbing pigment molecules)– Chlorophyll a– Chlorophyll b– Accessory pigments (auxiliary pigments)

Carotenoids (are usually red, orange, or yellow pigments)

Page 6: Photosynthesis Chapter 5. Outline I. Photosynthesis A. Introduction B. Reactions

Photosynthesis - Chlorophyll’s

When you shine white light on chlorophyll, its molecules will absorb certain colors of light. The light that isn’t absorbed is reflected, which is what our eyes see. Green is what we see and all the rest red, orange, yellow & blue are absorbed.

Page 7: Photosynthesis Chapter 5. Outline I. Photosynthesis A. Introduction B. Reactions

Light-dependent Reactions

Overview: On the thylakoid membrane the light energy is absorbed by chlorophyll molecules-this light energy excites electrons and boosts them to higher energy levels. They are trapped by electron acceptor molecules that are poised at the start of a neighboring transport system. The electrons “fall” to a lower energy state, releasing energy that is harnessed to make ATP & NADPH.

Page 8: Photosynthesis Chapter 5. Outline I. Photosynthesis A. Introduction B. Reactions
Page 9: Photosynthesis Chapter 5. Outline I. Photosynthesis A. Introduction B. Reactions

Light-dependent ReactionsWhat happens to the water?

Photosystem II’s stolen electron is replenished by photolysis, or the splitting of H2O to form H+and O2 (note: the H+ is kept inside the thylakoid membrane). The O2 resulting is the source of all oxygen in our atmosphere.

Page 10: Photosynthesis Chapter 5. Outline I. Photosynthesis A. Introduction B. Reactions

Light-dependent ReactionsWhat happens to the water?

Page 11: Photosynthesis Chapter 5. Outline I. Photosynthesis A. Introduction B. Reactions

Light-dependent Reactions

Photosystem: light capturing unit, contains chlorophyll, the light capturing pigment

Electron transport system: sequence of electron carrier molecules that shuttle electrons, energy released to make ATP

Electrons in chlorophyll must be replaced so that cycle may continue-these electrons come from water molecules, Oxygen is liberated from the light reactions

Light reactions yield ATP and NADPH used to fuel the reactions of the Calvin cycle (light independent or dark reactions)

Page 12: Photosynthesis Chapter 5. Outline I. Photosynthesis A. Introduction B. Reactions

Stroma

Page 13: Photosynthesis Chapter 5. Outline I. Photosynthesis A. Introduction B. Reactions

PHOTOSYNTHESIS(All happens inside chloroplast)

Page 14: Photosynthesis Chapter 5. Outline I. Photosynthesis A. Introduction B. Reactions

Calvin Cycle (light independent or “dark” reactions)

ATP and NADPH generated in light reactions used to fuel the reactions which take CO2 and break it apart, then reassemble the carbons into glucose.

Called carbon fixation: taking carbon from an inorganic molecule (atmospheric CO2) and making an organic molecule out of it (glucose)

Simplified version of how carbon and energy enter the food chain

Page 15: Photosynthesis Chapter 5. Outline I. Photosynthesis A. Introduction B. Reactions