Photosynthesis - biology.
Publié le 11/05/2013
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P680 in Photosystem II is now electron deficient because it has donated electrons to P700 in Photosystem I.
P680 electrons are replenished by the water that has beenabsorbed by the plant roots and transported to the chloroplasts in the leaves.
The movement of electrons in Photosystems I and II and the action of an enzyme split thewater into oxygen, hydrogen ions, and electrons.
The electrons from water flow to Photosystem II, replacing the electrons lost by P680.
Some of the hydrogen ions maybe used to produce NADPH at the end of the electron transport chain, and the oxygen from the water diffuses out of the chloroplast and is released into theatmosphere through pores in the leaf.
The transfer of electrons in a step-by-step fashion in Photosystems I and II releases energy and heat slowly, thus protecting the chloroplast and cell from a harmfultemperature increase.
It also provides time for the plant to form NADPH and ATP.
In the words of American biochemist and Nobel laureate Albert Szent-Gyorgyi, “Whatdrives life is thus a little electric current, set up by the sunshine.”
B The Light-Independent Reaction
The chemical energy required for the light-independent reaction is supplied by the ATP and NADPH molecules produced in the light-dependent reaction.
The light-independent reaction is cyclic, that is, it begins with a molecule that must be regenerated at the end of the reaction in order for the process to continue.
Termed theCalvin cycle after the American chemist Melvin Calvin who discovered it, the light-independent reactions use the electrons and hydrogen ions associated with NADPH andthe phosphorus associated with ATP to produce glucose.
These reactions occur in the stroma, the fluid in the chloroplast surrounding the thylakoids, and each step iscontrolled by a different enzyme.
The light-independent reaction requires the presence of carbon dioxide molecules, which enter the plant through pores in the leaf, diffuse through the cell to thechloroplast, and disperse in the stroma.
The light-independent reaction begins in the stroma when these carbon dioxide molecules link to sugar molecules called ribulosebisphosphate (RuBP) in a process known as carbon fixation.
With the help of an enzyme, six molecules of carbon dioxide bond to six molecules of RuBP to create six new molecules.
Several intermediate steps, which require ATP,NADPH, and additional enzymes, rearrange the position of the carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen atoms in these six molecules, and when the reactions are complete, onenew molecule of glucose has been constructed and five molecules of RuBP have been reconstructed.
This process occurs repeatedly in each chloroplast as long ascarbon dioxide, ATP, and NADPH are available.
The thousands of glucose molecules produced in this reaction are processed by the plant to produce energy in theprocess known as aerobic respiration, used as structural materials, or stored.
The regenerated RuBP is used to start the Calvin cycle all over again.
IV PHOTOSYNTHESIS VARIATIONS
A majority of plants use these steps in photosynthesis.
Plants such as corn and crabgrass that have evolved in hot, dry environments, however, must overcome certainobstacles to photosynthesis.
On hot days, they partially close the pores in their leaves to prevent the escape of water.
With the pores only slightly open, adequateamounts of carbon dioxide cannot enter the leaf, and the Calvin cycle comes to a halt.
To get around this problem, certain hot-weather plants have developed a way tokeep carbon dioxide flowing to the stroma without capturing it directly from the air.
They open their pores slightly, take in carbon dioxide, and transport it deep withinthe leaves.
Here they stockpile it in a chemical form that releases the carbon dioxide slowly and steadily into the Calvin cycle.
With this system, these plants cancontinue photosynthesis on hot days, even with their pores almost completely closed.
A field of corn thus remains green on blistering days when neighboring plantswither, and crabgrass thrives in lawns browned by the summer sun.
Bacteria lack chloroplasts, and instead use structures called chromatophores—membranes formed by numerous foldings of the plasma membrane, the membranesurrounding the fluid, or cytoplasm, that fills the cell.
The chromatophores house thylakoids similar to plant thylakoids, which in some bacteria contain chlorophyll.
Forthese bacteria, the process of photosynthesis is similar to that of plants, algae, and seaweed.
Many of these chlorophyll-containing bacteria are abundant in oceans,lakes, and rivers, and the oxygen they release dissolves in the water and enables fish and other aquatic organisms to survive.
Certain archaebacteria, members of a group of primitive bacteria-like organisms, carry out photosynthesis in a different manner.
The mud-dwelling green sulfur andpurple sulfur archaebacteria use hydrogen sulfide instead of water in photosynthesis.
These archaebacteria release sulfur rather than oxygen, which, along withhydrogen sulfide, imparts the rotten egg smell to mudflats.
Halobacteria, archaebacteria found in the salt flats of deserts, rely on the pigment bacteriorhodopsin insteadof chlorophyll for photosynthesis.
These archaebacteria do not carry out the complete process of photosynthesis; although they produce ATP in a process similar to thelight-dependent reaction and use it for energy, they do not produce glucose.
Halobacteria are among the most ancient organisms, and may have been the starting pointfor the evolution of photosynthesis.
While it may seem that we understand photosynthesis in detail, decades of experiments have given us only a partial understanding of this important process.
A morethorough understanding of the details of photosynthesis may pave the way for development of crops that are more efficient at using the sun’s energy, producing foodfor increasingly bountiful harvests.
Contributed By:Leal G.
DicksonMicrosoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation.
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