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Photosynthesis in plants Light energy is used to transform carbon dioxide and water to energy rich food molecules composed of glucose monomers There are 2 stages in this process

Photosynthesis in plants

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Photosynthesis in plants. Light energy is used to transform carbon dioxide and water to energy rich food molecules composed of glucose monomers There are 2 stages in this process. Photosynthesis: The Details. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Photosynthesis in plants

Photosynthesis in plants• Light energy is used to transform carbon

dioxide and water to energy rich food molecules composed of glucose monomers

• There are 2 stages in this process

Page 2: Photosynthesis in plants

Photosynthesis: The DetailsPhotosynthesis: The DetailsPhotosynthesis is divided into 2 sequential processes: the light reactions (stages 1 & 2) and carbon fixation (stage 3)

The Light Reactions: Noncyclic Electron Flow

-Convert solar energy to chemical energy

-The process is divided into 3 parts:

1.Photoexcitation

2.Electron Transport

3.Chemiosmosis

Page 3: Photosynthesis in plants

1. Photoexcitation• Electrons in chlorophyll molecules are initially at ground

state• When a molecule absorbs a photon, one of the electrons is

elevated to an orbital where it has more potential energy

Page 4: Photosynthesis in plants

Photoexcitation• In the photosynthetic membrane, a nearby molecule referred to

as a Primary Electron Acceptor traps a high energy electron that has absorbed a photon

• This a redox reaction• In chloroplasts – independent pigments do not absorb light,

instead clusters of chlorophyll molecules and accessory pigments associated with proteins called photosystems absorb light

Page 5: Photosynthesis in plants

The Light Reactions

• Photosystems are embedded in the thylakoid membrane.

• They contain chlorophyll and accessory pigments that are associated with proteins.

• A photosystem consists of an antenna complex and a reaction centre.

Page 6: Photosynthesis in plants

Photosystems•Photosystems I and II

•Of the many chlorophyll a molecules only one can trigger the light reactions by donating its excited electron to a primary electron acceptor

•The other chlorophyll a, chlorophyll b and carotenoid molecules function collaboratively as a light-gathering antenna that absorbs photons and passes the energy from pigment to pigment until it reaches the one chlorophyll a molecule in an area called the reaction centre

Page 7: Photosynthesis in plants

Photosystem I and II

• Photosystem I contains a specialized chlorophyll a molecule known as P700 since it best absorbs light with an average wavelength of 700 nm

• Photosystem II contains a specialized chlorophyll a molecule known as P680 since it best absorbs light with an average wavelength of 680 nm

• P700 and P680 chlorophyll a molecules are identical – they simply absorb at slightly different wavelengths because of the effects of the proteins they are associated with in the reaction centre

Page 8: Photosynthesis in plants

The Light Reactions

Photosystem II (P680)• Two photons strike photosystem II

and excite 2 electrons from chlorophyll P680.

• The excited electrons are captured by a primary electron acceptor and are then transferred to plastoquinone (PQ) and the ETC.

Page 9: Photosynthesis in plants

The Light Reactions

Photosystem II (P680)• In the ETC, the 2 electrons pass

through a proton pump (Q cycle).• The Q cycle transports 4 protons

from the stroma into the thylakoid lumen to create a proton gradient.

Page 10: Photosynthesis in plants

The Light Reactions

Photosystem II (P680)• The electrochemical gradient

drives the photophosphorylation of ADP to ATP.

• 1 ATP forms for every 4 protons that pass through ATPase from the thylakoid lumen into the stroma.

Page 11: Photosynthesis in plants

The Light Reactions

Photosystem II (P680)• A Z protein splits water into 2 protons, 2

electrons and 1 oxygen atom.– The electrons replace those lost from

chlorophyll P680.– The protons remain in the thylakoid space to

add to the proton gradient.– Oxygen leaves as a byproduct.

Page 12: Photosynthesis in plants

Noncyclic Electron Transport and Chemiosmosis

• Photon excites 2 electrons of chlorophyll P680

• Through series of redox reactions, electron transferred to PQ and then to ETC

• Z protein splits water and replaces missing electrons in P680

• Electrons flow down an ETC to P700 providing energy to make ATP since light is required for the establishment of proton gradient, this process is called photophosphorylation

• Excited electrons are stored as high energy-electrons in NADPH

http://vcell.ndsu.edu/animations/photosynthesis/movie.htm

http://vcell.ndsu.edu/animations/photosystemII/movie.htm

Page 13: Photosynthesis in plants
Page 14: Photosynthesis in plants

The Light Reactions

Photosystem I (P700)• Two photons strike photosystem I and

excite 2 electrons from chlorophyll P700 (replaced by electrons from P680).

• These electrons pass through another ETC.

• The enzyme NADP reductase uses the 2 electrons and a proton from the stroma to reduce 1 NADP+ to 1 NADPH.

Page 15: Photosynthesis in plants

http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0070960526/student_view0/chapter5/animation_quiz_1.html

Page 16: Photosynthesis in plants

Cyclic flow

• Photosystem I only• Electron excited and trapped by primary electron acceptor• Electron passed to Fd• Passes through Q cycle, b6-f complex and back to chlorophyll

P700• Generates proton gradient for ATP synthesis, does NOT

release electrons to generate NADPH• Without NADPH, carbon fixation cannot occur

http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/olcweb/cgi/pluginpop.cgi?it=swf::535::535::/sites/dl/free/0072437316/120072/bio12.swf::Cyclic%20and%20Noncyclic%20Photophosphorylation