Pi + ADP = ATP
granum
space inside a chloroplast
thylakoid membrane
thylakoid space
granum
stroma
stsarch grain
outer membrane
inner membrane
dna loop
chlorophyll
absorb: red and blue light
reflect: green light
photosynthetic pigments that absorb different wavelengths of light to increase the range of light energy absorbed
Chlorophyll B
xanthophylls
carotenoids
beta carotene
The actual structures embedded in the thylakoid membrane that contain photosynthetic pigments used to absorb a wide range of light wavelengths
Chlorophyll A
Excite two electrons so they can be released to a higher energy level
2 ATP
Reduced NADP
LDR: thylakoid membrane
LIR: stroma
Cyclic photophosphorylation
Non-cyclic photophosphorylation
1. e- in ps1 are excited by light energy
2. e- escape and are taken in by primary electrom acceptor
3. e- pass down ETC and lose energy
4. energy is used to pump H+ iond across thylakoid membrane
5. this creates electrochemical gradient so H+ diffuse back through ATP synthase. this produces ATP from ADP+ Pi (chemiosmosis)
6. e- eventually fall back into ps1
1. light excites e- in both photosystems
2. from ps11 e- are taken in by primary electron acceptor
3. e- pass down ETC and lose energy
4. energy is used to pump H+ ions across thylakoid membrane and create electrochemical gradient
5. H+ ions diffuse back through ATP synthase to produce ATP
6. e- are taken in by ps1
7. from ps1 e- go to electron acceptor, then ETC, then used to make reduced NADP
8. photolysis of water (happening at same time): H2O = 2H+ + 2e- + 1/2 O2
9. H+ used to make reduced NADP, 2e- used to give to ps11, O2 is released
1. CO2 added to 5-carbon molecule RuBP to produce unstable 6-carbon intermediate molecule (reaction is called carbon fixation and is catalysed by RUBISCO (enzyme))
2. unstable intermediate molecule breaks into 2 3-carbon molecules called GP. ATP and reduced NADP are used to convert GP into TP (reduction stage). TP is converted into amino acids, fattu acids, glycerol, hexose sugars
3. ATP is added to some TP molecules to regenerate 5-carbon RuBP
Usually lead to an increase in the rate of photosynthesis
Temperature
Light intensity
Carbon dioxide conc
As intensity increases rate of photosynthesis also increases
This will increase until another factor is limiting
If light intensity is lowered, It will limit concentrations of ATP in reduced NADP
With less ATP and reduced NADP there will be less conversion of GP to TP and less TP to RuBP
Concentration of GP will increase, but TP and RuBP will decrease
As temperature increases rate of reaction will increase due to increased kinetic energy
Above the optimum temp proteins will lose their tertiary structure and denature
All of Calvin cycle reactions are controlled by enzymes so denaturing will mean no carbon fixation and no conversion of GP to TP or TP to RuBP
Higher CO2 concentrations will lead to higher rate of fixation
This will lead to a higher concentration of GP and TP
The points were the rate of carbohydrates produced by photosynthesis are balanced by the rate of carbohydrates consumed by respiration
Two during each day
graph- photosynthesis and respiration meet
