Lecture: 2.3 PHOTOSYNTHESIS: Photosynthesis Converts Light Energy To Chemical Energy of Food
Lecture: 2.3 PHOTOSYNTHESIS: Photosynthesis Converts Light Energy To Chemical Energy of Food
Lecture: 2.3 PHOTOSYNTHESIS: Photosynthesis Converts Light Energy To Chemical Energy of Food
3 PHOTOSYNTHESIS
Life on Earth is solar powered. The chloroplasts in plants and other photosynthetic
organisms capture light energy from the sun and convert it to chemical energy that is stored
in sugar and other organic molecules. This conversion process is called photosynthesis.
Almost all plants are autotrophs; the only nutrients they require are water and
minerals from the soil and carbon dioxide from the air. Specifically, plants are
photoautotrophs, organisms that use light as a source of energy to synthesize organic
substances. Photosynthesis also occurs in algae like kelp, certain other unicellular
eukaryotes, and some prokaryotes
On the other hands, heterotrophs obtain organic material by the second major mode
of nutrition. Unable to make their own food, they live on compounds produced by other
organisms, the autotrophs.
Chloroplasts: The sites of photosynthesis in plants. All green parts of a plant, including
green stems and unripened fruit, have chloroplasts, but the leaves are the major sites of
photosynthesis in most plants . There are about half a million chloroplasts in a chunk of leaf
with a top surface area of 1 mm 2. Chloroplasts are found mainly in the cells of the
mesophyll, the tissue in the interior of the leaf. Carbon dioxide enters the leaf, and oxygen
exits, by way of microscopic pores called stomata (singular, stoma; from the Greek,
meaning “mouth”). Water absorbed by the roots is delivered to the leaves in veins. Leaves
also use veins to export sugar to roots and other non-photosynthetic parts of the plant.
(singular, stoma; from the Greek, meaning “mouth”). Water absorbed by the roots is
delivered to the leaves in veins. Leaves also use veins to export sugar to roots and other
non-photosynthetic parts of the plant.
A chloroplast has an envelope of two membranes surrounding a dense fluid called the
stroma. Suspended within the stroma is a third membrane system, made up of sacs called
thylakoids, which segregates the stroma from the thylakoid space inside these sacs. In
some places, thylakoid sacs are stacked in columns called grana (singular, granum).
Chlorophyll, the green pigment that gives leaves their color, resides in the thylakoid
membranes of the chloroplast.
It is the light energy absorbed by chlorophyll that drives the synthesis of organic
molecules in the chloroplast. Now that we have looked at the sites of photosynthesis in
plants, we are ready to look more closely
at the process of photosynthesis.
Phase 1: Carbon fixation. The Calvin cycle incorporates each CO2 molecule, one at
a time, by attaching it to a five-carbon sugar named ribulose bisphosphate(RuBP).
The enzyme that catalyzes this first step is RuBP carboxylase-oxygenase, or
(rubisco) - the most abundant protein in chloroplasts and is also thought to be the
most abundant protein on Earth.
Phase 2: Reduction. Each molecule of 3-phosphoglycerate receives an additional
phosphate group from ATP, becoming 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate. Next, a pair of
electrons donated from NADPH reduces 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate, which also loses a
phosphate group in the process, becoming glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate (G3P).
Phase 3: Regeneration of the CO2 acceptor (RuBP). In a complex series of
reactions, the carbon skeletons of five molecules of G3P are rearranged by the last
steps of the Calvin cycle into three molecules of RuBP. To accomplish this, the cycle
spends three more molecules of ATP. The RuBP is now prepared to receive CO 2
again, and the cycle continues.