Army Public School Gopalpur: Class - 11 Science Subject - Biology
Army Public School Gopalpur: Class - 11 Science Subject - Biology
Army Public School Gopalpur: Class - 11 Science Subject - Biology
NOTES
Photosynthesis, a physico-chemical process by which the green plants use
light energy to drive the synthesis of organic compounds.
Photosynthesis is the process by which the green plants absorb sunlight to
produce glucose from carbon dioxide and water.
Photosynthesis is important due to
it is the primary source of all food on earth
it is also responsible for the release of oxygen into the atmosphere by green
plants.
EARLY EXPERIMENTS ON PHOTOSYNTHESIS
Joseph Priestley (1733-1804) in 1770 performed a series of experiments that
revealed the essential role of air in the growth of green plants.
Priestley observed that a candle burning in a bell jar, soon gets extinguished
and a mouse would soon suffocate in the bell jar because a burning candle or
an animal that breathe the air, both somehow, damage the air.
When he placed a mint plant in the same bell jar, he found that the mouse
stayed alive and the candle continued to burn.
Jan Ingenhousz, using a similar setup as the one used by Priestley, but by
placing it once in the dark and once in the sunlight, showed that sunlight is
essential to the plant process that somehow purifies the air fouled by burning
candles or breathing animals.
Ingenhousz with an aquatic plant showed that in bright sunlight, small bubbles
were formed around the green parts while in the dark they did not, and later
he discovered that these bubbles to be of oxygen.
Small bubbeles which formed were to be of oxygen; hence, he showed that it
is only the green part of the plants that could release oxygen.
Julius von Sachs provided evidence for production of glucose in chlorophyll
located in chloroplasts within plant cells and glucose is usually stored as
starch.
W Engelmann used a prism splitted light into its spectral components and then
illuminated a green alga, Cladophora, placed in a suspension of aerobic
bacteria, which were used to detect the sites of O2 evolution.
Engelmann observed that the bacteria accumulated mainly in the regions of
blue and red light of the split spectrum, which resembles roughly the
absorption spectra of chlorophyll a and b.
By the middle of the nineteenth century, the key feature of photosynthesis,
i.e., plants could use light energy to make carbohydrates from CO2 and water,
was known.
Cornelius van Niel demonstrated that photosynthesis is essentially a light-
dependent reaction in which hydrogen from a suitable oxidisable compound
reduces carbon dioxide to carbohydrates.
In green plants, H2O is the hydrogen donor and is oxidised to O2, when H2S,
instead is the hydrogen donor for purple and green sulphur bacteria, the
‘oxidation’ product is sulphur or sulphate.
Hence, it was inferred that the O2 evolved by the green plant comes from H2O,
not from carbon dioxide, and the equation of photosynthesis is
SITE OF PHOTOSYNTHESIS
The mesophyll cells in the leaves have a large number of chloroplasts, which
align themselves along the walls of the mesophyll cells, such that they get the
optimum quantity of the incident light.
Within the chloroplast, there is the membranous system consisting of grana,
the stroma lamellae, and the fluid stroma.
The membrane system is responsible for trapping the light energy and also for
the synthesis of ATP and NADPH.
In stroma, enzymatic reactions incorporate CO2 into the plant leading to the
synthesis of sugar, which in turn forms starch.
The set of reactions directly driven by light is called light reaction.
The reactions which are not directly light driven but are dependent on the
products of light reactions (ATP and NADPH) are known as dark reactions.
Chloroplast
PIGMENTS IN PHOTOSYNTHESIS
Pigments are substances that have an ability to absorb light, at specific
wavelengths.
The colour of the leaves is due to four pigments such as
Chlorophyll a (bright or blue green in the chromatogram),
chlorophyll b (yellow green),
xanthophylls (yellow) and
carotenoids (yellow to yellow-orange)
The wavelengths at which there is maximum absorption by chlorophyll a, show
higher rate of photosynthesis; hence, we can conclude that chlorophyll a is the
chief pigment associated with photosynthesis.
Other thylakoid pigments, like chlorophyll b, xanthophylls and carotenoids,
which are called accessory pigments, also absorb light and transfer the energy
to chlorophyll a, and also protect chlorophyll a from photo-oxidation.
Splitting of Water
CHEMIOSMOTIC HYPOTHESIS
The theory which explains how ATP is synthesized in the chloroplast is
chemiosmotic hypothesis.
Like in respiration, in photosynthesis too, ATP synthesis is linked to
development of a proton gradient across the membranes of the thylakoid.
In phototsynthesis, proton accumulation is towards the lumen, whereas in
respiration, protons accumulate in the intermembrane space of the
mitochondria when electrons move through the ETS.
The processes that take place during the activation of electrons and their
transport to determine the steps that cause a proton gradient to develop are
the following:
Since splitting of the water molecule takes place on the inner side of the
membrane, the hydrogen ions that are produced accumulate within the lumen
of the thylakoids.
As electrons move through the photosystems, protons are transported across
the membrane because the primary accepter of electron transfers its electron
to an H carrier; hence, this molecule removes a proton from the stroma while
transporting an electron.
Protons are necessary for the reduction of NADP+ to NADPH+ H+, these
protons are also removed from the stroma.
Within the chloroplast, protons in the stroma decrease in number, whereas in
the lumen there is accumulation of protons, which creates a proton gradient
across the thylakoid membrane as well as a decrease in pH in the lumen.
The gradient is broken down due to the movement of protons across the
membrane to the stroma through the transmembrane channel of the F0 of the
ATPase.
The ATPase enzyme consists of two parts
one is F0 embedded in the membrane and forms a transmembrane channel
that carries out facilitated diffusion of protons across the membrane
other portion is called F1 and protrudes on the outer surface of the thylakoid
membrane on the side that faces the stroma.
The break down of the gradient provides enough energy to cause a
conformational change in the F1 particle of the ATPase, which makes the
enzyme synthesise several molecules of energy-packed ATP.
Chemiosmosis requires a membrane, a proton pump, a proton gradient and
ATPase.
USE OF ATP AND NADPH
The phase in which O2 diffuses out of the chloroplast while ATP and NADPH
are used to drive the processes leading to the synthesis of sugar is called
biosynthetic phase of photosynthesis.
Biosynthetic phase does not directly depend on the presence of light but is
dependent on the products of the light reaction, i.e., ATP and NADPH,
besides CO2 and H2
CO2 is combined with H2O to produce sugars.
The use of radioactive 14C by Melvin Calvin in algal photosynthesis studies led
to the discovery that the first CO2 fixation product was a 3-carbon organic acid.
Calvin worked out the complete biosynthetic pathway; hence, it was called
Calvin cycle.
The first product identified was 3-phosphoglyceric acid (PGA).
Another experiment on another plant discovered oxaloacetic acid or OAA as
the first stable product of photosynthesis.
CO2 assimilation during photosynthesis was said to be of two main types:
those plants in which the first product of CO2 fixation is a C3 acid (PGA), i.e.,
the C3 pathway,
the plants in which the first product was a C4 acid (OAA), i.e., the C4
C3 pathway
Carboxylation
Carboxylation is the fixation of CO2 into a stable organic intermediate, where
CO2 is utilised for the carboxylation of RuBP.
Carboxylation is catalysed by the enzyme RuBP carboxylase, which results in
the formation of two molecules of 3-PGA.
Since this enzyme also has an oxygenation activity it is called as RuBP
carboxylase-oxygenase or RuBisCO.
Reduction
The steps involve utilisation of 2 molecules of ATP for phosphorylation and 2
of NADPH for reduction per CO2 molecule fixed.
The fixation of six molecules of CO2 and 6 turns of the cycle are required for
the removal of one molecule of glucose from the pathway.
Regeneration
The regeneration steps require one ATP for phosphorylation to form RuBP.
Regeneration of the CO2 acceptor molecule RuBP is crucial if the cycle is to
continue uninterrupted.
For every CO2 molecule entering the Calvin cycle, 3 molecules of ATP and 2
of NADPH are required.
To make one molecule of glucose, 6 turns of the cycle are required.
Calvin cycle
THE C 4 PATHWAY
Though these plants have the C4 oxaloacetic acid as the first CO2 fixation
product, plants use the C3 pathway or the Calvin cycle as the main
biosynthetic pathway.
C4 plants are special because
1. they have a special type of leaf anatomy,
2. they tolerate higher temperatures,
3. they show a response to highlight intensities,
4. they lack a process called photorespiration and have greater productivity of
biomass.
5. The particularly large cells around the vascular bundles of the C4 pathway
plants are called bundle sheath cells, and the leaves which have such anatomy
are said to have ‘Kranz’ anatomy.
6. Kranz’ means ‘wreath’ and is a reflection of the arrangement of cells.
7. The bundle sheath cells may form several layers around the vascular bundles.
8. Bundle sheath cells are characterised by having a large number of
chloroplasts, thick walls impervious to gaseous exchange and no intercellular
spaces.
9. The presence of the bundle sheath would help to identify the C4
10. The pathway discovered by Hatch and Slack is called Hatch and Slack
Pathway, which is again a cyclic process.
11. The primary CO2 acceptor is a 3-carbon molecule phosphoenol pyruvate
(PEP) and is present in the mesophyll cells and the enzyme responsible for
this fixation is PEP carboxylase or PEPcase.
12. The mesophyll cells lack RuBisCO enzyme and the C4 acid OAA is formed
in the mesophyll cells.
13. It then forms other 4-carbon compounds in the mesophyll cells itself,
which are transported to the bundle sheath cells.
14. In the bundle sheath cells, these C4 acids are broken down to release
CO2 and a 3-carbon molecule.
15. The 3-carbon molecule is transported back to the mesophyll where it is
converted to PEP again, thus, completing the cycle.
16. The CO2 released in the bundle sheath cells enters the C3 or the Calvin
pathway.
17. The bundle sheath cells are rich in an enzyme ribulose bisphosphate
carboxylase-oxygenase (RuBisCO), but lack PEPcase.
18. The Calvin pathway is common to the C3 and C4
19. In the C4 plants, it does not take place in the mesophyll cells but does so
only in the bundle sheath cells.
Hatch-Slack pathway
PHOTORESPIRATION
The first step of the Calvin pathway is the first CO2 fixation step.
Respiration is the reaction where RuBP combines with CO2 to form 2
molecules of 3PGA, that is catalysed by RuBisCO.
RuBP + CO2 -> 2 X 3PGA
RuBisCO has a much greater affinity for CO2 than for O2.
In C3 plants, some O2 do bind to RuBisCO, and hence CO2 fixation is
decreased.
The RuBP instead of being converted to 2 molecules of PGA binds with O2 to
form one molecule and phosphoglycolate in a pathway called
photorespiration.
In the photorespiratory pathway, there is neither synthesis of sugars, nor of
ATP.
In C3 plants, some O2 do bind to RuBisCO, and hence CO2 fixation is
decreased.
In the photorespiratory pathway, there is no synthesis of ATP or NADPH;
therefore, photorespiration is a wasteful process.
In C4 plants, photorespiration does not occur because they have a mechanism
that increases the concentration of CO2 at the enzyme site.
This takes place when the C4 acid from the mesophyll is broken down in the
bundle cells to release CO2, which results in increasing the intracellular
concentration of CO2.
Photorespiration