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Outline
• Overview
• Photosynthesis
I. Properties of light and pigments
II. Chloroplast structure and function
III. Light reactions
IV. “Dark” or Carbon reactions
V. Summary and conclusions
• Respiration
I. Processes
II. Energy and food chains
III. Carbon Cycle
Photosynthesis and Cellular
Respiration
Photosynthesis and respiration are complementary
processes in the living world. Photosynthesis uses
the energy of sunlight to produce sugars and other
organic molecules.
These molecules in turn serve as food for other
organisms that carry out respiration to obtain the
chemical bond, a process that uses O2 to form CO2
from the same carbon atoms that had been taken
up as CO2 and converted into sugars by
photosynthesis.
CO2 + H2O O2 + C6H12O6
6 6 6 1
PHOTOSYNTHESIS
SUNLIGHT
CHLOROPLASTS
C6H12O6 + O2 H2O + CO2 + ATP
6
6 6
1
RESPIRATION
MITOCHONDRIA
What came first, photosynthesis
or respiration?
The first cells on the earth are thought to have been
capable of neither photosynthesis nor respiration.
However, photosynthesis must have preceded
respiration on the earth, since there is strong
evidence that billions of years of photosynthesis
were required before O2 had been released in
sufficient quantity to create an atmosphere rich in
this gas. (The earth's atmosphere presently
contains 20% O2.)
Introduction to photosynthesis
• From the Greek
PHOTO = produced by light
SYNTHESIS = a whole made of parts put
together.
Definition: PHOTOSYNTHESIS is the process
whereby plants, algae, some bacteria,
use the energy of the sun to synthesize organic
compounds (sugars) from inorganic compounds
(CO2 and water).
WHY IS PHOTOSYNTHESIS
SO IMPORTANT?
PHOTOSYNTHESIS is one of the most
important biological process on earth!
• Provides the oxygen we breathe
• Consumes much of the CO2
• Food
• Energy
• Fibers and materials
GENERAL FORMULA FOR
PHOTOSYNTHESIS
light
6 CO2 + 12 H2O ---------> C6H12O6 + 6 O2 + 6 H2O
pigments, enzymes
* *
• Oxygen on earth allowed for the evolution of aerobic
respiration and higher life-forms.
• Respiration: extracting energy from compounds (sugars)
C6H12O6 + O2  6 CO2 + ATP
PROPERTIES OF LIGHT
Virtually all life depends on it!
• Light moves in waves, in energy units
called PHOTONS
• Energy of a PHOTON inversely proportional
to its wavelength
• Visible light (between UV and IR) occurs in
a spectrum of colors
Visible light contains just the right amount of
energy for biological reactions
Light is absorbed by pigments
• The primary pigment for photosynthesis is
chlorophyll a
• It absorbs blue and red light, not green (green
light is reflected back!)
Absorption spectrum
of chlorophyll a
Chlorophyll a is the primary
photosynthetic pigment that drives
photosynthesis.
Accessory pigments absorb at
different wavelengths,
extending the range of light
useful for photosynthesis.
• Absorption spectrum of chlorophyll a:
BLUE & RED
• Action spectrum of photosynthesis closely
matches absorption spectrum of
chlorophyll a, but not perfectly (due to
accessory pigments)
Chloroplast structure
• Football shaped
• Double membrane
• Stroma
• Thylakoid
membrane
• Grana (stacks)
• Lumen
(inside thylakoid)
stroma
Grana
thylakoids
lumen
Chloroplast structure and function:
solar chemical factory
Chloroplast Membrane Structure
• The thylakoid is the structural unit of
photosynthesis containing photosynthetic
chemicals.
• Thylakoids are stacked like pancakes in
stacks known collectively as grana. The
areas between grana are referred to as
stroma.
• While the mitochondrion has two
membrane systems, the chloroplast has
three, forming three compartments.
Chloroplast Structure & Function
• The chloroplast has three membranes: inner,
outer, and thylakoid . It has three
compartments: stroma, thylakoid space, and
inter-membrane space.
• These compartments and the membranes
that separate them serve to isolate different
aspects of photosynthesis.
– Dark reactions take place in the stroma.
– Light reactions take place on the thylakoid
membranes.
Inside a Chloroplast
• Remember: Structure correlates to function!
Overview of photosynthesis:
Note: The Light and “Dark”or Carbon
reactions happen at different sites in the
chloroplast
LIGHT
REACTIONS
(Thylakoids)
“DARK” or CARBON
REACTIONS
(Stroma)
light
ATP
NADPH
(ENERGY)
H2O
O2
(OXYGEN GAS)
CO2
C6H12O6
(GLUCOSE)
The Light Reactions
1. Light dependent
2. Occur in the thylakoid membrane of
chloroplast
4. Use light energy (photons) to generate two
chemical energy compounds: ATP &
NADPH
3. Water is split into oxygen gas (O2) and H+
The“Dark” or Carbon Reactions
1. Light independent (can occur in light or dark;
some enzymes require activation by light)
2. Occur in the stroma of chloroplasts
3. Use the chemical energy produced in Light
Reactions (ATP; NADPH) to reduce CO2 to
carbohydrate (sugar).
4. CO2 is converted to sugar by entering the
Calvin Cycle
Efficiency & Photosynthesis
• Photosynthesis is not perfect.
• Depending upon the plant type, it ranges
from being only 1 - 4 % efficient to having
7% efficiency
Summary of Photosynthesis:
1. Light energy absorbed by chlorophyll a
drives the reactions of photosynthesis.
2. Converts light energy into chemical
energy to make organic compounds.
3. CO2 and H2O used to produce
C6H12O6 (glucose) and O2 (gas).
4. Light Reactions occur in thylakoids of the
chloroplasts; ATP and NADPH are formed;
water is split to O2 (gas) and protons.
5. Carbon Reactions occur in stroma – Calvin
Cycle fixes CO2 to produce C6H12O6
(glucose).
6. Low efficiency, about 1- 7%
7. Nevertheless, PHOTOSYNTHESIS is still the
most important biological process on earth!
Without
photosynthesis,
virtually all
plants and
animals would
become extinct.
RESPIRATION
• Process of making energy of food available in
the cell…
• Involves breaking down
• Complicated molecules  into simple molecules
(C6H12O6, sugars) (CO2, water)
Chloroplast –vs- Mitochondria
• Both are surrounded by a double membrane
with an intermembrane space.
• Both have their own DNA .
• Both are involved in energy metabolism.
• Both have membrane reticulations filling
their inner space to increase the surface area
on which reactions with membrane-bound
proteins can take place.
Mitochondria Structure
• The outer membrane to protect the organelle
• The intramembranous space of the
mitochondria (the space between the inner
and outer membranes)
• The inner membrane is folded into a series
cristae or long folds that greatly increase the
surface area of the inner membrane allowing
more area for energy production.
RESPIRATION
The energy held by complicated molecules is held
temporarily as ATP (energy currency)
C6H12O6 + 6 O2  6CO2 + 6 H2O + 36 ATP
(glucose) (energy)
Respiration occurs mainly in
Mitochondria and Cytoplasm
Stages of Respiration
Cellular Respiration has three main stages:
• Glycolysis
• Krebs Cycle
• Electron transport system
3 Stages of cellular respiration
• Glycolysis: Splitting of glucose – 2 net ATP generated
• Krebs Cycle: Energy of glucose molecule is harvested
as ATP (2) – it occurs in the mitochondria (matrix)
• Electron Transport System: also happens in the
mitochondria, more ATP are generated (32).
• For each glucose molecule, total ATP = 36
• Only 39% efficient, rest is lost as heat.
Photosynthesis Respiration
• Reaction: CO2+H2O+sunC6H12O6+O2+H2O C6H12O6+O2CO2+H2O+36ATP
• Reactants: Carbon dioxide, water, sun Glucose, oxygen
• Products: Glucose Energy
• By-products: Oxygen Carbon dioxide, water
• Cellular location: Chloroplasts Cytoplasm, mitochondria
• Energetics: Requires energy Releases energy
• Chemical paths: Light reactions & Glycolysis, Krebs cycle
Calvin cycle & Electron Transport Syst.
• Summary: Sugar synthesized using Energy released from
energy from the sun sugar breakdown
Photosynthesis and respiration
• Photosynthesis and respiration are
complimentary reactions…
PHOTOSYNTHESIS RESPIRATION
CO2 + H2O  O2 + SUGARS SUGARS + O2  H2O + CO2
PLANTS,
ALGAE,
BACTERIA
MOST LIVING
ORGANISMS
H2O H2O
O2
O2
CO2
CO2
SUGARS
Sunlight
energy
USEFUL CHEMICAL
ENERGY (ATP)
Respiration, Energy & Carbon Cycle
• Energy
• Virtually all organisms require energy of food for:
• Making chemicals
(proteins, carbs, etc.)
• Movement
• Cell division
• Heat, electricity and light production
• The way living organisms obtain energy is through
Cell respiration
ENERGY: ability to do work
Newton’s First Law of Thermodynamics:
“Energy cannot be created or destroyed, it
can only be transformed from one form
to another”
• Once a cell has used energy to do work, it cannot
be used again by any organism.
(1701)
ENERGY
ENERGY FLOW IS LINEAR
Sun  Earth Producers 1o consumers  2o consum
heat resp, heat resp, heat resp, heat
Energy flows into ecosystem from the sun
Energy travels in a straight line by way of
food chains.
ENERGY
However, much energy is lost as heat along the
way – as a result of respiration.
Approximately 90% energy is lost on each step!
• Newton’s Second Law of
Thermodynamics:
“In any transfer of energy there is always a
loss of useful energy to the system, usually in
the form of heat”
Food Chains
Food chains demonstrate linear nature of energy
• Producers are the base of the food chain, they
include photosynthetic organisms like:
• Plants
• Algae
• Certain bacteria
Food chains
• Primary
consumers –
all plant eaters
(herbivores).
Secondary
consumers –
Eat primary
consumers,
(carnivores)
Food chains
• Decomposers – obtain energy by breaking
down remaining organic material of the
other members of the food chain.
• Fungi and bacteria.
Matter
• All important elements move in cycles;
Environment Organisms
Cycles called biogeochemical cycles:
Water cycle
Carbon cycle
Nitrogen cycle
The Carbon Cycle
• Carbon from the atmosphere (CO2) enters the
biosphere by way of plants!
– CO2 used in photosynthesis
– Carbon moves into food chain
• Carbon is released to the physical environment by
respiration
– Release CO2 during respiration
– Amount CO2 fixed in photosynthesis = the amount
released by respiration
Carbon Cycle
• Carbon moves from atmosphere to plants to
animals and back to atmosphere.
“Look deep into nature,
and then you will
understand everything
better.”
Albert Einstein
• http://www.biologie.uni-hamburg.de/b-
online/library/falk/CellStructure/cellStructur
e.htm

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Photosynthesis and Cellular Respiration-0.ppt

  • 1. Outline • Overview • Photosynthesis I. Properties of light and pigments II. Chloroplast structure and function III. Light reactions IV. “Dark” or Carbon reactions V. Summary and conclusions • Respiration I. Processes II. Energy and food chains III. Carbon Cycle
  • 2. Photosynthesis and Cellular Respiration Photosynthesis and respiration are complementary processes in the living world. Photosynthesis uses the energy of sunlight to produce sugars and other organic molecules. These molecules in turn serve as food for other organisms that carry out respiration to obtain the chemical bond, a process that uses O2 to form CO2 from the same carbon atoms that had been taken up as CO2 and converted into sugars by photosynthesis.
  • 3. CO2 + H2O O2 + C6H12O6 6 6 6 1 PHOTOSYNTHESIS SUNLIGHT CHLOROPLASTS
  • 4. C6H12O6 + O2 H2O + CO2 + ATP 6 6 6 1 RESPIRATION MITOCHONDRIA
  • 5. What came first, photosynthesis or respiration? The first cells on the earth are thought to have been capable of neither photosynthesis nor respiration. However, photosynthesis must have preceded respiration on the earth, since there is strong evidence that billions of years of photosynthesis were required before O2 had been released in sufficient quantity to create an atmosphere rich in this gas. (The earth's atmosphere presently contains 20% O2.)
  • 6. Introduction to photosynthesis • From the Greek PHOTO = produced by light SYNTHESIS = a whole made of parts put together. Definition: PHOTOSYNTHESIS is the process whereby plants, algae, some bacteria, use the energy of the sun to synthesize organic compounds (sugars) from inorganic compounds (CO2 and water).
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  • 8. WHY IS PHOTOSYNTHESIS SO IMPORTANT? PHOTOSYNTHESIS is one of the most important biological process on earth! • Provides the oxygen we breathe • Consumes much of the CO2 • Food • Energy • Fibers and materials
  • 9. GENERAL FORMULA FOR PHOTOSYNTHESIS light 6 CO2 + 12 H2O ---------> C6H12O6 + 6 O2 + 6 H2O pigments, enzymes * * • Oxygen on earth allowed for the evolution of aerobic respiration and higher life-forms. • Respiration: extracting energy from compounds (sugars) C6H12O6 + O2  6 CO2 + ATP
  • 10. PROPERTIES OF LIGHT Virtually all life depends on it! • Light moves in waves, in energy units called PHOTONS • Energy of a PHOTON inversely proportional to its wavelength • Visible light (between UV and IR) occurs in a spectrum of colors
  • 11. Visible light contains just the right amount of energy for biological reactions
  • 12. Light is absorbed by pigments • The primary pigment for photosynthesis is chlorophyll a • It absorbs blue and red light, not green (green light is reflected back!) Absorption spectrum of chlorophyll a
  • 13. Chlorophyll a is the primary photosynthetic pigment that drives photosynthesis. Accessory pigments absorb at different wavelengths, extending the range of light useful for photosynthesis.
  • 14. • Absorption spectrum of chlorophyll a: BLUE & RED • Action spectrum of photosynthesis closely matches absorption spectrum of chlorophyll a, but not perfectly (due to accessory pigments)
  • 15. Chloroplast structure • Football shaped • Double membrane • Stroma • Thylakoid membrane • Grana (stacks) • Lumen (inside thylakoid) stroma Grana thylakoids lumen
  • 16. Chloroplast structure and function: solar chemical factory
  • 17. Chloroplast Membrane Structure • The thylakoid is the structural unit of photosynthesis containing photosynthetic chemicals. • Thylakoids are stacked like pancakes in stacks known collectively as grana. The areas between grana are referred to as stroma. • While the mitochondrion has two membrane systems, the chloroplast has three, forming three compartments.
  • 18. Chloroplast Structure & Function • The chloroplast has three membranes: inner, outer, and thylakoid . It has three compartments: stroma, thylakoid space, and inter-membrane space. • These compartments and the membranes that separate them serve to isolate different aspects of photosynthesis. – Dark reactions take place in the stroma. – Light reactions take place on the thylakoid membranes.
  • 19. Inside a Chloroplast • Remember: Structure correlates to function!
  • 20. Overview of photosynthesis: Note: The Light and “Dark”or Carbon reactions happen at different sites in the chloroplast LIGHT REACTIONS (Thylakoids) “DARK” or CARBON REACTIONS (Stroma) light ATP NADPH (ENERGY) H2O O2 (OXYGEN GAS) CO2 C6H12O6 (GLUCOSE)
  • 21. The Light Reactions 1. Light dependent 2. Occur in the thylakoid membrane of chloroplast 4. Use light energy (photons) to generate two chemical energy compounds: ATP & NADPH 3. Water is split into oxygen gas (O2) and H+
  • 22. The“Dark” or Carbon Reactions 1. Light independent (can occur in light or dark; some enzymes require activation by light) 2. Occur in the stroma of chloroplasts 3. Use the chemical energy produced in Light Reactions (ATP; NADPH) to reduce CO2 to carbohydrate (sugar). 4. CO2 is converted to sugar by entering the Calvin Cycle
  • 23. Efficiency & Photosynthesis • Photosynthesis is not perfect. • Depending upon the plant type, it ranges from being only 1 - 4 % efficient to having 7% efficiency
  • 24. Summary of Photosynthesis: 1. Light energy absorbed by chlorophyll a drives the reactions of photosynthesis. 2. Converts light energy into chemical energy to make organic compounds. 3. CO2 and H2O used to produce C6H12O6 (glucose) and O2 (gas).
  • 25. 4. Light Reactions occur in thylakoids of the chloroplasts; ATP and NADPH are formed; water is split to O2 (gas) and protons. 5. Carbon Reactions occur in stroma – Calvin Cycle fixes CO2 to produce C6H12O6 (glucose). 6. Low efficiency, about 1- 7% 7. Nevertheless, PHOTOSYNTHESIS is still the most important biological process on earth!
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  • 28. RESPIRATION • Process of making energy of food available in the cell… • Involves breaking down • Complicated molecules  into simple molecules (C6H12O6, sugars) (CO2, water)
  • 29. Chloroplast –vs- Mitochondria • Both are surrounded by a double membrane with an intermembrane space. • Both have their own DNA . • Both are involved in energy metabolism. • Both have membrane reticulations filling their inner space to increase the surface area on which reactions with membrane-bound proteins can take place.
  • 30. Mitochondria Structure • The outer membrane to protect the organelle • The intramembranous space of the mitochondria (the space between the inner and outer membranes) • The inner membrane is folded into a series cristae or long folds that greatly increase the surface area of the inner membrane allowing more area for energy production.
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  • 32. RESPIRATION The energy held by complicated molecules is held temporarily as ATP (energy currency) C6H12O6 + 6 O2  6CO2 + 6 H2O + 36 ATP (glucose) (energy) Respiration occurs mainly in Mitochondria and Cytoplasm
  • 33. Stages of Respiration Cellular Respiration has three main stages: • Glycolysis • Krebs Cycle • Electron transport system
  • 34. 3 Stages of cellular respiration • Glycolysis: Splitting of glucose – 2 net ATP generated • Krebs Cycle: Energy of glucose molecule is harvested as ATP (2) – it occurs in the mitochondria (matrix) • Electron Transport System: also happens in the mitochondria, more ATP are generated (32). • For each glucose molecule, total ATP = 36 • Only 39% efficient, rest is lost as heat.
  • 35. Photosynthesis Respiration • Reaction: CO2+H2O+sunC6H12O6+O2+H2O C6H12O6+O2CO2+H2O+36ATP • Reactants: Carbon dioxide, water, sun Glucose, oxygen • Products: Glucose Energy • By-products: Oxygen Carbon dioxide, water • Cellular location: Chloroplasts Cytoplasm, mitochondria • Energetics: Requires energy Releases energy • Chemical paths: Light reactions & Glycolysis, Krebs cycle Calvin cycle & Electron Transport Syst. • Summary: Sugar synthesized using Energy released from energy from the sun sugar breakdown
  • 36. Photosynthesis and respiration • Photosynthesis and respiration are complimentary reactions…
  • 37. PHOTOSYNTHESIS RESPIRATION CO2 + H2O  O2 + SUGARS SUGARS + O2  H2O + CO2 PLANTS, ALGAE, BACTERIA MOST LIVING ORGANISMS H2O H2O O2 O2 CO2 CO2 SUGARS Sunlight energy USEFUL CHEMICAL ENERGY (ATP)
  • 38. Respiration, Energy & Carbon Cycle • Energy • Virtually all organisms require energy of food for: • Making chemicals (proteins, carbs, etc.) • Movement • Cell division • Heat, electricity and light production • The way living organisms obtain energy is through Cell respiration
  • 39. ENERGY: ability to do work Newton’s First Law of Thermodynamics: “Energy cannot be created or destroyed, it can only be transformed from one form to another” • Once a cell has used energy to do work, it cannot be used again by any organism. (1701)
  • 40. ENERGY ENERGY FLOW IS LINEAR Sun  Earth Producers 1o consumers  2o consum heat resp, heat resp, heat resp, heat Energy flows into ecosystem from the sun Energy travels in a straight line by way of food chains.
  • 41. ENERGY However, much energy is lost as heat along the way – as a result of respiration. Approximately 90% energy is lost on each step! • Newton’s Second Law of Thermodynamics: “In any transfer of energy there is always a loss of useful energy to the system, usually in the form of heat”
  • 42. Food Chains Food chains demonstrate linear nature of energy • Producers are the base of the food chain, they include photosynthetic organisms like: • Plants • Algae • Certain bacteria
  • 43. Food chains • Primary consumers – all plant eaters (herbivores). Secondary consumers – Eat primary consumers, (carnivores)
  • 44. Food chains • Decomposers – obtain energy by breaking down remaining organic material of the other members of the food chain. • Fungi and bacteria.
  • 45. Matter • All important elements move in cycles; Environment Organisms Cycles called biogeochemical cycles: Water cycle Carbon cycle Nitrogen cycle
  • 46. The Carbon Cycle • Carbon from the atmosphere (CO2) enters the biosphere by way of plants! – CO2 used in photosynthesis – Carbon moves into food chain • Carbon is released to the physical environment by respiration – Release CO2 during respiration – Amount CO2 fixed in photosynthesis = the amount released by respiration
  • 47. Carbon Cycle • Carbon moves from atmosphere to plants to animals and back to atmosphere.
  • 48. “Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.” Albert Einstein