plant biology fall 2006 bisc 367 - plant physiology lab spring 2009 notices: the photosynthesis labs...

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Plant Biology Fall 2006 BISC 367 - Plant Physiology Lab Spring 2009 Notices: The photosynthesis labs are running again this week Reading material (Taiz & Zeiger): Chapter 7: Photosynthesis: the Light Reactions Chapter 8: Photosynthesis: Carbon Reactions Chapter 9: Photosynthesis: Physiological and Ecological Considerations.

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Page 1: Plant Biology Fall 2006 BISC 367 - Plant Physiology Lab Spring 2009 Notices: The photosynthesis labs are running again this week Reading material (Taiz

Plant Biology Fall 2006BISC 367 - Plant Physiology

LabSpring 2009

Notices:• The photosynthesis labs are running again this week

• Reading material (Taiz & Zeiger):• Chapter 7: Photosynthesis: the Light Reactions• Chapter 8: Photosynthesis: Carbon Reactions• Chapter 9: Photosynthesis: Physiological and Ecological Considerations.

Page 2: Plant Biology Fall 2006 BISC 367 - Plant Physiology Lab Spring 2009 Notices: The photosynthesis labs are running again this week Reading material (Taiz

Photosynthesis - carbon reactions• P/S is divided into 2 stages

Light NRG oxidizes H2O

Reductant & NRG are used to reduce CO2

•Carbon reactions are:

– dependent on the products of the light rxns

– regulated by light

• don’t require light

Page 3: Plant Biology Fall 2006 BISC 367 - Plant Physiology Lab Spring 2009 Notices: The photosynthesis labs are running again this week Reading material (Taiz

Calvin cycle• Basic mechanism used by all photosynthetic

eukaryotes to reduce CO2

5C

2 x 3C

CHO

Triose phosphates are diverted for starch/sucrose synthesis

Derived from the light rxns

Derived from the light rxns

Page 4: Plant Biology Fall 2006 BISC 367 - Plant Physiology Lab Spring 2009 Notices: The photosynthesis labs are running again this week Reading material (Taiz

Calvin cycle• Incorporation of CO2 - carboxylation rxn

Ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco)very abundant protein (40% leaf soluble protein)

Page 5: Plant Biology Fall 2006 BISC 367 - Plant Physiology Lab Spring 2009 Notices: The photosynthesis labs are running again this week Reading material (Taiz

Calvin cycle• Overall reaction for production of one hexose sugar:

– 6 CO2 + 11 H2O + 12 NADPH + 18 ATPFructose-6-phosphate + 12 NADP+ + 6 H+ + 18 ADP + 17 Pi

• Efficiency?– Need 8 photons to fix 1 CO2 (48)

– 1 quantum mole of photons = 175 kJ (for red light)

– To fix 6 (moles) CO2 you need 8400 kJ

– Oxidizing one mole of F-6-P yields 2804 kJ

– Efficiency ~ 33%• Most NRG lost from light during synthesis of ATP and NADPH

Page 6: Plant Biology Fall 2006 BISC 367 - Plant Physiology Lab Spring 2009 Notices: The photosynthesis labs are running again this week Reading material (Taiz

Rubisco is also an oxygenase• Oxygenation of RuBP initiates photorespiration• Photorespiration (P/R) opposes P/S

– Produces CO2

Produced by light rxns

Fixation of carbon

Oxygenation by Rubisco

Loss of CO2 by P/R

Page 7: Plant Biology Fall 2006 BISC 367 - Plant Physiology Lab Spring 2009 Notices: The photosynthesis labs are running again this week Reading material (Taiz

Photorespiration decreases efficiency of photosynthesis

• O2 and CO2 compete for the same active site of Rubisco

– Rubisco binds CO2 with higher affinity than O2 - BUT

– As the temperature increases the amount of CO2 in soltn decreases faster than O2

– As temperature rises so does P/R

Page 8: Plant Biology Fall 2006 BISC 367 - Plant Physiology Lab Spring 2009 Notices: The photosynthesis labs are running again this week Reading material (Taiz

2 x 5C

2 x 2C

2 x 2C

2 x 2C 1 x 3C

1 x 3C

1 x 3C

C2 oxidative carbon cycle:

• Input 4C

• Output 3C• 75% C recovery rate

Chloroplast

Peroxisome

Mitochondrion

Page 9: Plant Biology Fall 2006 BISC 367 - Plant Physiology Lab Spring 2009 Notices: The photosynthesis labs are running again this week Reading material (Taiz

• CO2 pumps

– Concentrate CO2 in vicinity of Rubisco

– Rates of P/R are very low

Plants that live in hot or extreme environments have evolved mechanisms to avoid

photorespiration

Page 10: Plant Biology Fall 2006 BISC 367 - Plant Physiology Lab Spring 2009 Notices: The photosynthesis labs are running again this week Reading material (Taiz

C4 Photosynthesis

CO2 Pump

Frequent plasmodesmata facilitate transfer of C3/C4 acids between mesophyll and BSC

High [CO2]

Low [CO2]

Page 11: Plant Biology Fall 2006 BISC 367 - Plant Physiology Lab Spring 2009 Notices: The photosynthesis labs are running again this week Reading material (Taiz

C4 Photosynthesis - NRG

C4 plants need more light quanta than C3 plants to fix CO2

Page 12: Plant Biology Fall 2006 BISC 367 - Plant Physiology Lab Spring 2009 Notices: The photosynthesis labs are running again this week Reading material (Taiz

• C4 P/S is efficient:– PEP Carboxylase has a high affinity for HCO3

-

• Allows for reduced stomatal aperture

• Higher water use efficiency

– High [CO2] in the cp of BSC inhibits P/S

C4 Photosynthesis - NRG

Page 13: Plant Biology Fall 2006 BISC 367 - Plant Physiology Lab Spring 2009 Notices: The photosynthesis labs are running again this week Reading material (Taiz

Environmental factors limit P/S

• Limiting factors include:• Low [CO2]• Low light• High light • High [O2]• Temperature

Page 14: Plant Biology Fall 2006 BISC 367 - Plant Physiology Lab Spring 2009 Notices: The photosynthesis labs are running again this week Reading material (Taiz

Light response curves

• Light saturation for an individual leaf is ~ 1/3 - 1/2 photon flux of full sunlight

BUT

• At the whole plant level P/S is rarely saturated even in full sunlight

Slope = max. quantum yield for CO2 assimilation

Light saturation point

Page 15: Plant Biology Fall 2006 BISC 367 - Plant Physiology Lab Spring 2009 Notices: The photosynthesis labs are running again this week Reading material (Taiz

Light response curves

• Light saturation for an individual leaf is ~ 1/3 - 1/2 photon flux of full sunlight

BUT

• At the whole plant level P/S is rarely saturated even in full sunlight

Page 16: Plant Biology Fall 2006 BISC 367 - Plant Physiology Lab Spring 2009 Notices: The photosynthesis labs are running again this week Reading material (Taiz

Light response curves for a C3 and a C4 plant

• CO2 supply limits P/S in C3 plants

– Light saturation occurs at fluence rates ~ 25% full sunlight

• CO2 does not limit P/S in C4 plants AND

• C4 plants have a higher photosynthetic capacity

– C4 plants can take advantage of excess light and don’t show light saturation

– Utilization of excess light NRG allows C4 plants to provide the ATP needed to run the CO2 pump

Fluence rate (mol m-2 s-1)

CO

2 up

take

(m

ol m

-2 s

-1)

Page 17: Plant Biology Fall 2006 BISC 367 - Plant Physiology Lab Spring 2009 Notices: The photosynthesis labs are running again this week Reading material (Taiz

C3 versus C4 plants

C3 C4

Photorespiration Yes Not detectable

CO2 compensation point (L CO2 l-1) 20 – 100 0 – 5

Temperature optimum (oC) 20 – 25 30 – 45

Quantum yield as a function of temp. Declining Steady

Transpiration ratio 500 – 1000 200 – 350

Light saturation (mole photons m-2 s-1) 400 – 500 Does not saturate

C3 plants are favoured in environments where water is plentiful, temperature and light levels are moderate (temperate climates)

C4 plants are favoured in environments where water is limiting and light and temperatures are high (tropical / subtropical habitats)