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PHOTOSYNTHESIS

PHOTOSYNTHESIS. Overview: A. Step One: Transferring radiant energy to chemical energy. e-. Energy of photon. Transferred to an electron. e-. Overview: A. Step Two: storing that chemical energy in the bonds of molecules. e-. C 6 (glucose). ATP. ADP+P. 6 CO 2. e-. Overview:

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PHOTOSYNTHESIS

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  1. PHOTOSYNTHESIS

  2. Overview: A. Step One: Transferring radiant energy to chemical energy e- Energy of photon Transferred to an electron e-

  3. Overview: A. Step Two: storing that chemical energy in the bonds of molecules e- C6 (glucose) ATP ADP+P 6 CO2 e-

  4. Overview: A. Step Two: storing that chemical energy in the bonds of molecules e- C6 (glucose) ATP ADP+P 6 CO2 e- Light Dependent Reaction Light Independent Reaction

  5. A. Step 1: The Light Dependent Reaction: 1. Primitive Systems a. Cyclic phosphorylation e- Used by photoheterotrophs: Purple non-sulphur bacteria, green non-sulphur bacteria, and heliobacteria PS I “photosystems” are complexes of chlorophyll molecules containing Mg, nested in the inner membrane of bacteria and chloroplasts.

  6. A. Step 1: The Light Dependent Reaction: 1. Primitive Systems a. Cyclic phosphorylation e- acceptor e- PS I “photosystems” are complexes of chlorophyll molecules containing Mg, nested in the inner membrane of bacteria and chloroplasts.

  7. A. Step 1: The Light Dependent Reaction: 1. Primitive Systems a. Cyclic phosphorylation e- acceptor e- e- The electron is transferred to an electron transport chain PS I The electron transport chain is nested in the inner membrane, as well; like in mitochondria….

  8. A. Step 1: The Light Dependent Reaction: 1. Primitive Systems a. Cyclic phosphorylation e- acceptor e- ATP e- ADP+P The electron is passed down the chain, H+ are pumped out, they flood back in and ATP is made. PS I The electron transport chain is nested in the inner membrane, as well; like in mitochondria… and chemiosmosis occurs.

  9. A. Step 1: The Light Dependent Reaction: 1. Primitive Systems a. Cyclic phosphorylation e- acceptor e- ATP e- ADP+P An electron is excited by sunlight, and the energy is used to make ATP. The electron is returned to the photosystem….CYCLIC PHOSPHORYLATION. PS I The electron transport chain is nested in the inner membrane, as well; like in mitochondria… and chemiosmosis occurs.

  10. A. Step 1: The Light Dependent Reaction: 1. Primitive Systems a. Cyclic phosphorylation b. Sulpher bacteria e- acceptor e- Purple and green sulphur bacteria ATP e- ADP+P PS I An electron is excited by sunlight, and the energy is used to make ATP. The electron is returned to the photosystem….CYCLIC PHOSPHORYLATION….. BUT something else can happen…

  11. A. Step 1: The Light Dependent Reaction: 1. Primitive Systems a. Cyclic phosphorylation b. Sulpher bacteria e- acceptor e- NADP NADPH ATP e- ADP+P PS I The electron can be passed to NADP, reducing NADP to NADP- (+H+)

  12. A. Step 1: The Light Dependent Reaction: 1. Primitive Systems a. Cyclic phosphorylation b. Sulpher bacteria e- acceptor e- NADP NADPH ATP IF this happens, the electron is NOT recycled back to PSI. For the process to continue, an electron must be stripped from another molecule and transferred to the PS to be excited by sunlight… e- ADP+P PS I The electron can be passed to NADP, reducing NADP to NADP- (+H+)

  13. A. Step 1: The Light Dependent Reaction: 1. Primitive Systems a. Cyclic phosphorylation b. Sulpher bacteria e- acceptor e- NADP NADPH ATP IF this happens, the electron is NOT recycled back to PSI. For the process to continue, an electron must be stripped from another molecule and transferred to the PS to be exited by sunlight… e- ADP+P PS I H2S 2e + 2H+ + S The Photosystem is more electronegative than H2S, and can strip electrons from this molecule – releasing sulphur gas….

  14. A. Step 1: The Light Dependent Reaction: 1. Primitive Systems a. Cyclic phosphorylation b. Sulpher bacteria e- acceptor e- NADP NADPH So, through these reactions, both ATP and NADPH are produced; sulphur gas is released as a waste product. These organisms are limited to living in an environment with H2S!!! (Sulphur springs). ATP e- ADP+P PS I H2S 2e + 2H+ + S

  15. A. Step 1: The Light Dependent Reaction: 1. Primitive Systems a. Cyclic phosphorylation b. Sulpher bacteria e- acceptor e- NADP NADPH So, through these reactions, both ATP and NADPH are produced; sulphur gas is released as a waste product. These organisms are limited to living in an environment with H2S!!! (Sulphur springs). ATP e- ADP+P PS I If photosynthesis could evolve to strip electrons from a more abundant electron donor, life could expand from these limited habitats… hmmm…. H2S…. H2S…. H2S 2e + 2H+ + S

  16. A. Step 1: The Light Dependent Reaction: 1. Primitive Systems 2. Advanced System e- acceptor Cyanobacteria, algae, plants PS I PS II RIGHT! H2O!!! But water holds electrons more strongly than H2S; this process didn’t evolve until a PS evolved that could strip electrons from water… PSII.

  17. A. Step 1: The Light Dependent Reaction: 1. Primitive Systems 2. Advanced System e- acceptor e- e- PS I PS II Photons excite electrons in both photosystems…

  18. A. Step 1: The Light Dependent Reaction: 1. Primitive Systems 2. Advanced System e- acceptor e- e- ATP ADP+P PS I PS II The electron from PSII is passed down the ETC, making ATP, to PSI

  19. A. Step 1: The Light Dependent Reaction: 1. Primitive Systems 2. Advanced System e- acceptor e- NADP NADPH ATP ADP+P PS I e- PS II The electron from PSI is passed to NADP to make NADPH

  20. A. Step 1: The Light Dependent Reaction: 1. Primitive Systems 2. Advanced System e- acceptor e- NADP NADPH ATP ADP+P PS I e- The e- from PSII has “filled the hole” vacated by the electron lost from PSI. PS II

  21. A. Step 1: The Light Dependent Reaction: 1. Primitive Systems 2. Advanced System e- acceptor e- NADP NADPH ATP ADP+P PS I e- Water is split to harvest electrons; oxygen gas is released as a waste product. PS II 2H2O 4e + 4H+ + 2O (O2)

  22. Those were the light dependent reactions; reactions in which photosynthetic organisms transform radiant energy into chemical bond energy in ATP (and NADPH). e- C6 (glucose) ATP ADP+P 6 CO2 e- Light Dependent Reaction Light Independent Reaction

  23. A. Step 1: The Light Dependent Reaction: B: Step 2: The Light-Independent Reaction: e- C6 (glucose) ATP ADP+P 6 CO2 e- Light Dependent Reaction Light Independent Reaction

  24. CO2 B. The Light Independent Reaction C6 C5 RuBP 2 C3 (PGA) A molecule of CO2 binds to Ribulose biphosphate, making a 6-carbon molecule. This molecule is unstable, and splits into 2 3-carbon molecules of phosphoglycerate (PGA)

  25. 6CO2 B. The Light Independent Reaction 6C6 6C5 RuBP 12 C3 (PGA) Now, it is easier to understand these reactions if we watch the simultaneous reactions involving 6 CO2 molecules

  26. 6CO2 B. The Light Independent Reaction 6C6 6C5 RuBP 12 C3 ATP ADP+P 10 C3 2 C3 C6 (Glucose) NADPH NADP 2 of the 12 PGA are used to make glucose, using energy from ATP and the reduction potential of NADPH… essentially, the H is transferred to the PGA, making carbohydrate from carbon dioxide.

  27. 6CO2 B. The Light Independent Reaction 6C6 6C5 RuBP 12 C3 ATP ADP+P ATP ADP+P 10 C3 2 C3 C6 (Glucose) NADPH NADP More energy is used to rearrange the 10 C3 molecules (30 carbons) into 6 C5 molecules (30 carbons); regenerating the 6 RuBP.

  28. Review

  29. A History of Photosynthesis Photosynthesis evolved early; at least 3.8 bya – bacterial mats like these stromatolites date to that age, and earlier microfossils exist that look like cyanobacteria. Also, CO2 levels drop (Calvin cycle + dissolved in rain)

  30. A History of Photosynthesis What kind of photosynthesis was this???

  31. A History of Photosynthesis What kind of photosynthesis was this??? Cyclic phosphorylation and Sulphur photosynthesis, because it was non-oxygenic.

  32. A History of Photosynthesis And 2.3 bya is when we see the oldest banded iron formations, demonstrating for the first time that iron crystals were exposed to atmospheric oxygen during sedimentation.

  33. Carboniferous: 354-290 mya This is the period when our major deposits of fossil fuel were laid down as biomass that did NOT decompose. So, that carbon was NOT returned to the atmosphere as CO2…lots of photosynthesis and less decomposition means a decrease in CO2 and an increase in O2 in the atmosphere…

  34. Cell Biology I. Overview II. Membranes: How Matter Get in and Out of Cells III. Harvesting Energy: Respiration and Photosynthesis IV. Protein Synthesis

  35. IV. Protein Synthesis Why is this important? Well…what do proteins DO?

  36. IV. Protein Synthesis Why is this important? Well…what do proteins DO? • Think about it this way: • sugars, fats, lipids, nucleic acids and proteins, themselves, are broken down and built up through chemical reactions catalyzed by enzymes. • So everything a cell IS, and everything it DOES, is either done by proteins or is done by molecules put together by proteins.

  37. IV. Protein Synthesis A. Overview A T G C T G A C T A C T G T A C G A CT G A T G A C Genes are read by enzymes and RNA molecules are produced… this isTRANSCRIPTION (t-RNA) (r-RNA) U G C U G A C U A C U (m-RNA)

  38. IV. Protein Synthesis A. Overview A T G C T G A C T A C T G T A C G A CT G A T G A C Genes are read by enzymes and RNA molecules are produced… this is TRANSCRIPTION (t-RNA) (r-RNA) U G C U G A C U A C U (m-RNA) Eukaryotic RNA and some prokaryotic RNA have regions cut out… this is RNA SPLICING

  39. IV. Protein Synthesis A. Overview A T G C T G A C T A C T G T A C G A CT G A T G A C R-RNA is complexed with proteins to form ribosomes. Specific t-RNA’s bind to specific amino acids. (t-RNA) (r-RNA) U G C U G A C U A C U Amino acid (m-RNA) ribosome

  40. IV. Protein Synthesis A. Overview A T G C T G A C T A C T G T A C G A CT G A T G A C The ribosome reads the m-RNA. Based on the sequence of nitrogenous bases in the m-RNA, a specific sequence of amino acids (carried to the ribosome by t-RNA’s) is linked together to form a protein. This is TRANSLATION. (t-RNA) (r-RNA) U G C U G A C U A C U Amino acid (m-RNA) ribosome

  41. IV. Protein Synthesis A. Overview A T G C T G A C T A C T G T A C G A CT G A T G A C The protein product may be modified (have a sugar, lipid, nucleic acid, or another protein added) and/or spliced to become a functional protein. This is POST-TRANSLATIONAL MODIFICATION. (t-RNA) (r-RNA) U G C U G A C U A C U Amino acid (m-RNA) ribosome glycoprotein

  42. IV. Protein Synthesis A. Overview B. The Process of Protein Synthesis 1. Transcription a. The message is on one strand of the double helix - the sense strand: 3’ 5’ sense A C T A T A C G T A C A A A C G G T T A T A C T A C T T T T G A T A T G C A T G T T T G C C A A T A T G A T G A A A nonsense 5’ 3’ “TAG A CAT” message makes ‘sense’ “ATC T GTA” ‘nonsense’ limited by complementation

  43. IV. Protein Synthesis A. Overview B. The Process of Protein Synthesis 1. Transcription a. The message is on one strand of the double helix - the sense strand: 3’ 5’ sense A C T A T A C G T A C A A A C G G T T A T A C T A C T T T T G A T A T G C A T G T T T G C C A A T A T G A T G A A A nonsense 5’ 3’ exon intron exon In all eukaryotic genes and in some prokaryotic sequences, there are introns and exons. There may be multiple introns of varying length in a gene. Genes may be several thousand base-pairs long. This is a simplified example!

  44. IV. Protein Synthesis A. Overview B. The Process of Protein Synthesis 1. Transcription b. The cell 'reads' the correct strand based on the location of the promoter, the anti-parallel nature of the double helix, and the chemical limitations of the 'reading' enzyme, RNA Polymerase. Promoter 3’ 5’ sense A C T A T A C G T A C A A A C G G T T A T A C T A C T T T T G A T A T G C A T G T T T G C C A A T A T G A T G A A A nonsense 5’ 3’ exon intron exon Promoters have sequences recognized by the RNA Polymerase. They bind in particular orientation.

  45. IV. Protein Synthesis A. Overview B. The Process of Protein Synthesis 1. Transcription b. The cell 'reads' the correct strand based on the location of the promoter, the anti-parallel nature of the double helix, and the chemical limitations of the 'reading' enzyme, RNA Polymerase. Promoter 3’ 5’ sense A C T A T A C G T A C A A A C G G T T A T A C T A C T T T G C A U GUUU G C C A A U AUG A U G A T G A T A T G C A T G T T T G C C A A T A T G A T G A A A nonsense 5’ 3’ exon intron exon • Strand separate • RNA Polymerase can only synthesize RNA in a 5’3’ direction, so they only read the anti-parallel, 3’5’ strand (‘sense’ strand).

  46. IV. Protein Synthesis A. Overview B. The Process of Protein Synthesis 1. Transcription c. Transcription ends at a sequence called the 'terminator'. Promoter Terminator 3’ 5’ sense A C T A T A C G T A C A A A C G G T T A T A C T A C T T T G C A U GUUU G C C A A U AUG A U G A T G A T A T G C A T G T T T G C C A A T A T G A T G A A A nonsense 5’ 3’ exon intron exon Terminator sequences destabilize the RNA Polymerase and the enzyme decouples from the DNA, ending transcription

  47. IV. Protein Synthesis A. Overview B. The Process of Protein Synthesis 1. Transcription c. Transcription ends at a sequence called the 'terminator'. Promoter Terminator 3’ 5’ sense A C T A T A C G T A C A A A C G G T T A T A C T A C T T T G C A U GUUU G C C A A U AUG A U G A T G A T A T G C A T G T T T G C C A A T A T G A T G A A A nonsense 5’ 3’ exon intron exon Initial RNA PRODUCT:

  48. IV. Protein Synthesis A. Overview B. The Process of Protein Synthesis 1. Transcription c. Transcription ends at a sequence called the 'terminator'. Promoter Terminator 3’ 5’ sense A C T A T A C G T A C A A A C G G T T A T A C T A C T T T T G A T A T G C A T G T T T G C C A A T A T G A T G A A A nonsense 5’ 3’ exon intron exon Initial RNA PRODUCT: G C A U GUUU G C C A A U AUG A U G A

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