Calvin Cycle
Calvin Cycle
Calvin Cycle
You, like all organisms on Earth, are a carbon-based life form. In other words, the complex molecules of
your amazing body are built on carbon backbones. You might already know that you’re carbon-based, but
have you ever wondered where all of that carbon comes from?
As it turns out, the atoms of carbon in your body were once part of carbon dioxide (\text {CO}_2CO2start
text, C, O, end text, start subscript, 2, end subscript) molecules in the air. Carbon atoms end up in you,
and in other life forms, thanks to the second stage of photosynthesis, known as the Calvin cycle (or
In plants, carbon dioxide (\text{CO}_2CO2start text, C, O, end text, start subscript, 2, end subscript)
enters the interior of a leaf via pores called stomata and diffuses into the stroma of the chloroplast—the
site of the Calvin cycle reactions, where sugar is synthesized. These reactions are also called the light-
In the Calvin cycle, carbon atoms from \text {CO}_2CO2start text, C, O, end text, start subscript, 2, end
subscript are fixed (incorporated into organic molecules) and used to build three-carbon sugars. This
process is fueled by, and dependent on, ATP and NADPH from the light reactions. Unlike the light
reactions, which take place in the thylakoid membrane, the reactions of the Calvin cycle take place in the
to make sugar.
The Calvin cycle reactions can be divided into three main stages: carbon fixation, reduction, and
net G3P molecule to be produced (that is, allows one G3P molecule to leave the cycle).
3 \text {CO}_2CO2start text, C, O, end text, start subscript, 2, end subscript molecules combine with
three molecules of the five-carbon acceptor molecule (RuBP), yielding three molecules of an unstable six-
carbon compound that splits to form six molecules of a three-carbon compound (3-PGA). This reaction is
In the second stage, six ATP and six NADPH are used to convert the six 3-PGA molecules into six
molecules of a three-carbon sugar (G3P). This reaction is considered a reduction because NADPH must
3. Regeneration. One G3P molecule leaves the cycle and will go towards making glucose, while
five G3Ps must be recycled to regenerate the RuBP acceptor. Regeneration involves a complex
1. Carbon fixation. A \text {CO}_2CO2start text, C, O, end text, start subscript, 2, end
(RuBP). This step makes a six-carbon compound that splits into two molecules of a three-carbon
compound, 3-phosphoglyceric acid (3-PGA). This reaction is catalyzed by the enzyme RuBP
carboxylase/oxygenase, or rubisco.
2. Reduction. In the second stage, ATP and NADPH are used to convert the 3-PGA molecules into
molecules of a three-carbon sugar, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate (G3P). This stage gets its name
because NADPH donates electrons to, or reduces, a three-carbon intermediate to make G3P.
3. Regeneration. Some G3P molecules go to make glucose, while others must be recycled to
regenerate the RuBP acceptor. Regeneration requires ATP and involves a complex network of
reactions, which my college bio professor liked to call the "carbohydrate scramble." ^11start
In order for one G3P to exit the cycle (and go towards glucose synthesis), three \text {CO}_2CO2start
text, C, O, end text, start subscript, 2, end subscript molecules must enter the cycle, providing three new
atoms of fixed carbon. When three \text {CO}_2CO2start text, C, O, end text, start subscript, 2, end
subscript molecules enter the cycle, six G3P molecules are made. One exits the cycle and is used to make
glucose, while the other five must be recycled to regenerate three molecules of the RuBP acceptor.
Three turns of the Calvin cycle are needed to make one G3P molecule that can exit the cycle and go
towards making glucose. Let’s summarize the quantities of key molecules that enter and exit the Calvin
cycle as one net G3P is made. In three turns of the Calvin cycle:
Carbon. 333 \text {CO}_2CO2start text, C, O, end text, start subscript, 2, end subscript combine
111 G3P molecule exits the cycle and goes towards making glucose.
555 G3P molecules are recycled, regenerating 333 RuBP acceptor molecules.
ATP. 999 ATP are converted to 999 ADP (666 during the fixation step, 333 during the
regeneration step).
NADPH. 666 NADPH are converted to 666 NADP^++start superscript, plus, end
A G3P molecule contains three fixed carbon atoms, so it takes two G3Ps to build a six-carbon glucose
molecule. It would take six turns of the cycle, or 666 \text {CO}_2CO2start text, C, O, end text, start
subscript, 2, end subscript, 181818 ATP, and 121212 NADPH, to produce one molecule of glucose.