Metabolism/Photosynthesis
Summary of the calvin cycle: -6 CO2 enter and are..... - 12 NADPH from the light reactions...... - 18 ATP from the light reactions..... - NADP+ and ADP are regenerated to....
- Converted into glucose - Are used to reduce Carbon atoms - Provide energy for - Return to the light reactions
Visible light spectrum
- Includes colors of light we can see - Includes wavelengths that drive photosynthesis
Phase 3: Regeneration of CO2 acceptor
- The remaining G3P used to regenerate RuBP to use CO2 and other
First law of Thermodynamics
- Total amount of energy in the universe remains constant -Energy is not created nor destroyed, but can change forms
Steps in light reactions
- When a pigment absorbs light, it goes from a ground state to an excited state, which is unstable - The electron is excited to the primary acceptor - Water then splits replacing the electrons that just left the photosystem - H+ are stored in the thylakoid space -1/2 O2 is released from leaf
Structure of ATP
-5-carbon sugar - Nucleotide base - Triphosphate tail
Induced fit
-An enzymes active site can conform to fit substances that are similar to, but not exactly the same shape as the active site - The polar/non-polar regions and charged regions of the substrate alter the folding of the enzyme
Phase 1: Carbon fixation
-CO2 enters and joins RuBP (5-carbon sugar) to become a 6-carbon sugar - 3-phosphoglycerate a 3-carbon sugar is formed when 6 carbon sugar splits
Second law of Thermodynamics
-Energy is lost as heat as it changes forms -Entropy disorder is increasing over time
ATP and ADP
-Enzymes can break bond between outermost pond tail - This releases energy which can be transferred to an endergonic reaction
Photolysis
-In the thylakoid membranes of a chloroplast during light-dependant reactions, two molecules of water are split to form oxygen, hydrogen ions, and electrons. -a process of photosynthesis in which water is split into H+ and OH-; the hydrogen ion is then joined to NADP
Phase 2: Reduction
-NADPH transfers electrons to PGA reducing it and forming G3P - Some G3P will go on to form glucose and other materials for the plant
Photosynthesis
-Process that converts solar energy into chemical energy -occurs in plants, algae, certain other protists, and some prokaryotes -these organisms are called photoautotrophs - they use the energy of sunlight to make organic molecules from water and carbon dioxide
What are two possible explanations for the existence of photorespiration, a process that can result in the loss of as much as 50% of the carbon fixed in the Calvin Cycle?
-Said to be an evolutionary relic. The early atmosphere in which primitive plants originated contained very little oxygen, so it's hypothesized that the early evolution of RuBisco was not influenced by its lack of discrimination between O2 and CO2. - It may function as a safety valve, preventing excess NADPH and ATP from reacting with oxygen and producing free radicals, as these can damage the metabolic functions of the cell by subsequent reactions with lipids or metabolites of alternate pathways.
Why does ATP give up energy so easily?
-The three phosphate groups clustered together puts negative charges in close proximity - The negative charges repel each other destabilizing the molecule - Removing the phosphate group makes the more stable ADP
The active site can lower and E sub A barrier by.....
-orienting substrates correctly - straining substrate bonds - providing a favorable microenvironment - covalently bonding to the substrate
Activity of an enzyme is affected by.....
-temperature and pH -
1st or 2nd law of thermodynamics: A hydroelectric plant at a waterfall, producing electricity
1
1st or 2nd law of thermodynamics: Apple trees absorbing energy from the sun and storing the energy in the chemical bonds of starch and sugar
1
1st or 2nd law of thermodynamics: Egyptian pyramids crumbling slowly to dust over long periods of time
1
1st or 2nd law of thermodynamics: The glow of a firefly
1
1st or 2nd law of thermodynamics: The glow of an incandescent bulb following the flow of electrons through a wire
1
1st or 2nd law of thermodynamics: The movement of a gasoline-powered automobile
1
1st or 2nd law of thermodynamics: Earth's sun is continuously losing energy to its surroundings
2
1st or 2nd law of thermodynamics: Humans running the 100-meter dash following usual food intake
2
1st or 2nd law of thermodynamics: The death and decay of an organism
2
Transformed energy results in increasing disorder is....
2nd law of thermodynamics
Overall equation of photosynthesis......
6CO2+6H2O+ Light energy-------C8H12O6 + 6O2
Entropy
A measure of disorder, or randomness
Anabolism
A metabolic pathway that consumes energy to synthesize a complex molecule from simpler molecules
Metabolic pathways
A series of chemical reactions that either builds a complex molecule (anabolic) or breaks down a complex molecule to simpler molecules (catabolic) -catalyzed by enzymes
In the metabolic pathway A-B-C-D-E, what effect would molecule E likely have on the enzyme that catalyzes A-B? a. Allosteric inhibitor b. Allosteric activator c. Competitive inhibitor d. Feedback activator e. Coenzyme
A. Allosteric inhibitor
One way in which a cell maintains metabolic disequilibrium is to a. Siphon products of a reaction off to the next step in a metabolic pathway b. Provide a constant supply of enzymes for critical reactions c. Use feedback inhibition to turn off pathways d. Use allosteric enzymes that can bind to activators or inhibitors e. Use the energy from anabolic pathways to drive catabolic pathways
A. Siphon products of a reaction off to the next step in a metabolic pathway
What happens to ADP?
ADP can be sued to reform ATP when more energy is available
Accessory pigments
Absorb energy in the yellow portion of the spectrum to utilize some of the lost energy
Catalytic cycle of an enzyme: Step 3
Active site (and R groups of its amino acids) can lower E sub A and speed up a reaction
Catalytic cycle of an enzyme: Step 6
Active site available for 2 new substrate molecules
ATP, adenosine triphosphate
Adenine-containing nucleoside triphosphate that releases free energy when its phosphate bonds are hydrolyzed. This energy is used to drive endergonic reactions in cells.
Explain why this reaction releases so much energy
All three phosphate groups are negatively charged. These like charges are crowded together and their mutual repulsion contributes to instability of this region of ATP. Triphosphate tail of ATP is chemical equal of compressed spring
Cooperativity is a form of....
Allosteric regulation that can amplify activity
Stoma
Allow exchange of carbon dioxide and oxygen between the surrounding air and photosynthetic cells inside the leaf. Also avenues for evaporative loss of water
Carotenoids
An accessory pigment, either yellow or orange, in the chloroplasts of plants and some prokaryotes. By absorbing wavelengths of light that chlorophyll count, carotenoids.............................. - Absorb violet and blue wavelengths but transmit red, orange, and yellow
System with low free energy: Equilibrium
At equilibrium
Which of the following terms best describes this reaction? a. Nonspontaneous b. -AG c. Endergonic d. Coupled reaction e. Anabolic reaction
B. -AG
When glucose and O2 are converted to carbon dioxide and water changes in total energy, entropy, and free energy are correctly represented as a. -AH, -AS, -AG b. -AH, +AS, -AG c. -AH, +AS, +AG d. +AH, -AS, +AG e. -AH, -AS, +AG
B. -AH, +AS, -AG
Zinc, an essential trace element, may be found bound to the active site of some enzymes. Such zinc ions most likely function as a. A coenzyme derived from a vitamin b. A cofactor necessary for catalysis c. A substrate of the enzyme d. A competitive inhibitor of the enzyme e. An allosteric activator of the enzyme
B. A cofactor necessary for catalysis
At equilibrium, a. No enzymes are functioning b. Free energy is decreasing c. The forward and backward reactions have stopped d. The products and reactants have equal values of H e. AG is 0
B. Free energy is decreasing
When a cell breaks down glucose, only about 34% of the energy is captured in ATP molecules. The remaining 66% of the energy is a. Used to increase the order necessary for life to exist b. Lost as heat, in accordance with the second law of thermodynamics c. Used to increase the entropy of the system by converting kinetic energy into potential energy d. Stored in starch or glycogen for later use by the cell e. Released when the ATP molecules are hydrolyzed
B. Lost as heat, in accordance with the second law of thermodynamics
An endergonic reaction could be described as one that a. Proceeds spontaneously with the addition of activation energy b. Produces products with more free energy than the reactants c. Is not able to be catalyzed by enzymes d. Releases energy e. Produces ATP for energy coupling
B. Produces products with more free energy than the reactants
Spongy layer (mesophyll)
Below palisades. More loosely arranged with labyrinth of air spaces through which carbon dioxide and oxygen circulate around the cells and up to the palisade region
Non-competitive inhibitors (allosteric inhibition)
Bind to another part of an enzyme changing the function and shape of active site
Competitive inhibitors
Bind to the active site of an enzyme, competing with the substrate
Allosteric control
Binding of a regulatory molecule to a protein at one site that affects the function of the protein at a different site
Allosteric
Binds to enzyme, some place other than active site
Which bond in ATP is likely to break? by what chemical mechanism is the bond broken?
Bonds between phosphate groups broken by hydrolysis
Cyclic or non-cyclic: ATP produced
Both
Cyclic or non-cyclic: Photosystem I involved
Both
Cyclic or non-cyclic: Uses ADP and Pi as reactants
Both
Cyclic or non-cyclic: Uses NADP+ as a reactant
Both
Vein
Branches throughout mesophyll. Brings xylem and phloem into close contact with photosynthetic tissue
Which line in the diagram indicates the activation energy of the noncatalyzed reaction?
C
What is meant by an induced fit? a. The binding of the substance is an energy-requiring process b. A competitive inhibitor can outcompete the substrate for the active site c. The binding of the substrate changes the shape of the active site, which can stress or bend substrate bonds d. The active site creates a microenvironment ideal for the reaction e. The binding of an activator to an allosteric site induces a more active form of the subunits of an enzyme
C. The binding of the substrate changes the shape of the active site, which can stress or bend substrate bonds
The formation of ATP from ADP and inorganic phosphate a. Is an exergonic process b. Transfers the phosphate to an intermediate that becomes more reactive c. Produces an unstable energy compound that can drive cellular work d. Has a AG of -7.3 kcal/mol under standard conditions e. involves the hydrolysis of a phosphate bond
C. Produces an unstable energy compound that can drive cellular work
Catabolic and anabolic pathways are often coupled in a cell because a. The intermediates of a catabolic pathway are used in the anabolic pathway b. Both pathways use the same enzymes c. The free energy released from one pathway is used to drive the other pathway d. The activation energy of the catabolic pathway can be used in the anabolic pathway e. Their enzymes are controlled by the same activators and inhibitors
C. The free energy released from one pathway is used to drive the other pathway
According to the first law of thermodynamics, a. For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction b. Every energy transfer results in an increase in disorder or entropy c. The total amount of energy in the universe is conserved or constant d. Energy can be transferred or transformed, but disorder always increases e. Potential energy is converted to kinetic energy, and kinetic energy is converted to heat
C. The total amount of energy in the universe is conserved or constant
In cooperativity, a. A cellular organelle contains all the enzymes needed for a metabolic pathway b. A product of a pathway serves as a competitive inhibitor of an enzyme early in the pathway c. A molecule bound to the active site of one subunit of an enzyme affects the active site of other subunits d. The allosteric site is filled with an activator molecule e. The product of one reaction serves as the substrate for the next reaction in intricately ordered metabolic pathways
C. A molecule bound to the active site of one subunit of an enzyme affects the active site of other subunits
Why does C4 photosynthesis require more ATP than does C3 photosynthesis?
C4 fixation is an elaboration of the more common C3 carbon fixation. There are more chemical steps in this process and therefore it requires more ATP to complete the process. C3 is a more efficient means of carbon fixation.
Stomata closing creates a problem because _______cannot get into cells and _______accumulates because it can not get out
CO2 O2
Energy is defined as.....
Capacity to cause change
4 examples of accessory pigments
Carotenoids-orange Xanthophylls-yellow Phycobilins-blue and red Anthocyanins-blue and red
Induced-fit molecules
Caused by entry of substrate, the change in shape of the active site of an enzyme so that it binds more snugly to the substrate
Where does the Calvin Cycle take place in a C4 plant?
Chloroplast
Reflected light
Color we see
Reaction center
Complex of proteins associated with a special pair of chlorophyll a molecules and a primary electron acceptor. Located in a photosystem, triggers light reactions of photosynthesis
Substrate and active site must be _______to each other to _______together -Fit like______
Complimentary Bind Puzzle pieces
Intermediates
Compounds formed between the beginning and end of a metabolic pathway
Mesophyll
Consists of parenchyma cells specialized for photosynthesis
Energy is.....
Constant (1st law of thermodynamics)
Energy is neither....
Created nor destroyed (1st law of thermodynamics)
Which line in the diagram indicates the AG of the enzyme-catalyzed reaction L-M+N?
D
When amino acids join to form a protein, which of the following energy and entropy changes apply? a. -AH, +AS, +AG b. -AH, -AS, +AG c. -AH, +AS, +AG d. +AH, -AS, +AG e. -AH, +AS, -AG
D. +AH, -AS, +AG
An enzyme raises which of the following parameters? a. AG b. AH c. The free energy of activation d. The speed of a reaction e. The equilibrium of a reaction
D. The speed of a reaction
Outside of the optimal temperature and pH an enzyme will......
Denature and cease to function
Stroma
Dense fluid within the chloroplast surrounding the thylakoid membrane and containing ribosomes and DNA; involved in the synthesis of organic molecules from carbon dioxide and water
Wavelength
Distance between crests of waves, such as those of the electromagnetic spectrum
A negative AG means that a. The quantity G of energy is available to do work b. The reaction is spontaneous c. The reactants have more free energy than the products d. The reaction is exergonic e. All of the above are true
E. All of the above are true
When substance A was added to an enzyme reaction, product formation decreased. The addition of more substrate did not increase product formation. From this we conclude that substance A could be a. Product molecules b. A cofactor c. An allosteric enzyme d. A competitive inhibitor e. A noncompetitive inhibitor
E. A noncompetitive inhibitor
Which of the following characteristics is most directly responsible for the specificity of a protein enzyme? a. Its primary structure b. Its secondary and tertiary structures c. The shape and characteristics of its allosteric site d. Its cofactors e. The R groups of the amino acids in its active site
E. The R groups of the amino acids in its active site
In an experiment, changing the pH from 7 to 6 resulted in an increase in product formation. From this we could conclude that a. The enzyme became saturated at pH 6 b. The enzyme's optimal pH is 6 c. This enzyme works best at a neutral pH d. The temperature must have increased when the pH was changed to 6 e. The enzyme was in a more active shape at pH 6
E. The enzyme was in a more active shape at pH 6
Light is a form of.....
Electromagnetic energy which travels in waves
How is ATP produced by cyclic electron flow?
Electrons begin at acceptor molecule and are passed to an electron transport chain. This ETC, like the one connecting the 2 photosystems, is a series of receptor molecules able to pass along electrons but the flow is from ps I directly back tp ps 1. Electrons begin at acceptor molecule for ps I and wind up back as ps 1 again. As the electrons slide along this chain of receptor molecules in cyclic electron flow, they lose energy. This energy is in stored in ATP molecules. Eneergy from electrons involved in cyclic electrons flow is used to produce ATP.
Exergonic or endergonic: The products of a chemical reaction have more energy than the reactants
Endergonic
Chemical energy
Energy available in molecules for release in a chemical reaction; a form of potential energy
Endergonic reactions
Energy goes in to build molecules
Exergonic reactions
Energy goes out to break down molecules
Potential energy is.....
Energy matter possesses because of its location or structure such as arrangement of electrons in bonds between atoms -chemical potential
Kinetic energy is....
Energy of motion such as light and heat
ATP/ADP cycle
Energy released by breakdown reactions in the cell is used to phosphorylate ADP, regenerating ATP. Chemical potential energy stored in ATP drives most cellular work.
G-3-P
Energy-rich molecule produced in the calvin cycle
Electromagnetic spectrum
Entire spectrum of electromagnetic radiation, ranging in wavelength from less than a nanometer to more than a kilometer
Some energy converted to heat as in....
Entropy
Transformed energy results in increasing disorder called.....
Entropy
The electron is....
Excited to the primary acceptor
Exergonic or endergonic: Burning wood at a campfire
Exergonic
Exergonic or endergonic: Glucose and oxygen produce carbon dioxide, and water plus energy
Exergonic
Exergonic or endergonic: The reactants of a chemical reaction have more energy than the product
Exergonic
Exergonic or endergonic: The reaction releases energy
Exergonic
Cells need to use energy given off from an _________ reaction to start _______reactions _______is used to couple these reactions
Exergonic Endergonic ATP
Thylakoid
Flattened membranous sac inside a chloroplast. Thylakoids often exist in stacks called grana that are interconnected. Their membranes contain molecular machinery used to convert light energy to chemical energy
When a pigment absorbs light, it......
Goes from a ground state to an excited state which is unstable
System with high free energy: Work capacity
Great work
Chlorophylls
Green pigment located in membranes within the chloroplasts of plants and algae and in the membranes of certain prokaryotes. Participates directly in light reactions, which convert solar to chemical energy - Absorb violet-to blue and red wavelengths; the reason leaves appear green
This energy is later used to pump....
H+ across the membrane and produce ATP
Chemical equilibrium
In a chemical reaction, the state in which the rate of the forward reaction equals the rate of the reverse reaction, so that the relative concentrations of the reactants and products do not change with time
Light reaction occur....
In the grana
Carbon fixation
Initial incorporation of carbon from CO2 into an organic compound by an antorophic organism
Most photosynthesis occurs...
Inside the chloroplasts located in the mesophyll of the leaves
Energy may be....
Kinetic or potential
System with low free energy: Work capacity
Less work capacity
Photosystems
Light capturing unit located in thylakoid membrane at chloroplast membrane of some prokaryotes, consisting of a reaction center complex surrounded by numerous light harnessing complexes I and II absorb light at different wavelengths
Cyclic/noncyclic.....
Light reactions
Calvin cycle is...
Light-independent reaction
Enzymes
Macromolecule serving as a catalyst, a chemical agent that increases the rate of a reaction without being consumed by the reaction. Most enzymes are proteins. - speed up metabolic reactions by lowering activation energy -proteins (usually) that catalyze reactions
Energy carriers
Mainly ATP; donate energy to reactions
Chemical reaction
Making and breaking of chemical bonds, leading to changes in the composition of matter
Transport proteins
Membrane-bound substances that adjust concentration gradients in ways that influence the direction of metabolic reactions
Catabolism
Metabolic pathway that releases energy by breaking down complex molecules to simpler molecules
Most reactions occur in orderly sequences called.... Each reaction is mediated by an......
Metabolic pathways Enzyme
Regulation of enzyme activity helps control.....
Metabolism
Feedback inhibition
Method of metabolic control in which the end product of a metabolic pathway acts as an inhibitor of an enzyme within that pathway -end product shuts down the pathway -end product comes back and binds to one of the enzymes in the pathway stopping it from functioning
Stomata
Microscopic pore surrounded by guard cells in the epidermis of leaves and stems that allows gas exchange between the environment and the interior of the plant
NonCyclic electron flow produces..... is ________what occurs
NADPH, ATP, and O2 Usually
Cyclic or non-cyclic: Produces a net gain of water as a product
Neither
Cyclic or non-cyclic: Uses CO2 as a reactant
Neither
Cyclic or non-cyclic: NADPH produced
Non cyclic
Cyclic or non-cyclic: Causes H+ to be shunted into the thylakoid compartments from the stroma
Noncyclic
Cyclic or non-cyclic: Photosystem II involved
Noncyclic
Cyclic or non-cyclic: Produces H+ by breaking apart H2O
Noncyclic
Cyclic or non-cyclic: Produces O2 as a product
Noncyclic
Cyclic or non-cyclic: Uses water as a reactant
Noncyclic
P1, P2, P3: Produces H2O as a product
None
System with high free energy: Equilibrium
Not at equilibrium
System with low free energy: Spontaneous
Not spontaneous
Palisades layer (mesophyll)
One or more layers of elongated parenchyma cells on upper part of leaf
Chloroplasts
Organelle found in plants and photosynthesis protists that absorb sunlight and use it to drive synthesis of organelle compounds from carbon dioxide and water - The two stages of photosynthesis occur here
Degradative pathways (catabolic)
Organic compounds are broken down in stepwise reactions
Coenzymes
Organic molecule serving as a cofactor. Most vitamins function as coenzymes in metabolic reactions
Heterotrophs
Organisms that obtain organic food molecules by eating other organisms or substances derived from them
P1, P2, P3: Produces PGA
Phase 1: CO2 fixation alone
P1, P2, P3: Requires CO2 as a reactant
Phase 1: CO2 fixation alone
P1, P2, P3: Requires RuBP as a reactant
Phase 1: CO2 fixation alone
P1, P2, P3: Produces G3P
Phase 2: Production of G3P
P1, P2, P3: Produces NADP+ as a reactant
Phase 2: Production of G3P
P1, P2, P3: Requires NADPH as a reactant
Phase 2: Production of G3P
P1, P2, P3: Produces ADP as a product
Phase 2: Production of G3P Phase 3: Regeneration of RuBP
P1, P2, P3: Produces Pi as a product
Phase 2: Production of G3P Phase 3: Regeneration of RuBP
P1, P2, P3: Requires ATP as a reactant
Phase 2: Production of G3P Phase 3: Regeneration of RuBP
P1, P2, P3: Requires G3P as a reactant
Phase 3: Regeneration of RuBP
Cyclic electron flow: when ATP is in low supply....
Photoexcited electrons take on alternative path
High levels of oxygen in leaves triggers_________ This decreases the plants _______
Photorespiration CO2
Chlorophyll a and b absorb red/blue wavelengths of light. these are the wavelengths they're using for.....
Photosynthesis
Why is neither O2 nor NADPH generated by cyclic electron flow?
Photosystem II is not used. Not enough energy to produce NADPH. O2 is apart of photolysis in PS II.
Chlorophyll b and carotenoids
Pigments that transfer energy to chlorophyll a
C4 plants
Plant in which the Calvin Cycle is preceded by reactions that incorporate CO2 into 4-carbon compound, the end product of which supplies CO2 for the Calvin Cycle
C3 plants
Plant that uses the Calvin Cycle for the initial steps that incorporate CO2 into organic material, forming a 3-carbon compound as the first stable intermediate
Electron transport systems
Process in which the NADH and [FADH2] produced during glycolysis, β-oxidation, and other catabolic processes are oxidized thus releasing energy in the form of ATP. The mechanism by which ATP is formed in the ETC is called chemiosmotic phosphorolation.
Catalytic cycle of an enzyme: Step 5
Products released from active site
Xylem
Provides waters and minerals from roots
Photons
Quantum or discrete quantity of light energy that behaves as if it were a particle - Packets of energy that have an undulating motion through space
Absorption spectrum
Range of a pigment's ability to absorb various wavelengths of light; also a graph of such a range
Substrates (reactants)
Reactant on which an enzyme works -substances able to enter into a reaction
Light dependent reactions
Reactions of photosynthesis that use energy from light to produce ATP and NADPH
Phycobilins
Red and blue pigments
Guard cell
Regulate opening and closing of the pore (stoma)
The absorption spectra of chloroplasts pigments provides clues to the........
Relative effectiveness of different wavelengths for driving photosynthesis
1/2 O2 is....
Released from leaf
Water then splits.......
Replacing the electrons that just left the photosystem
RuBP
Ribulose biphosphate, carboxylase, the enzyme that catalyzees the first step of the Calvin Cycle (addition of CO2 to RuBP)
Rubisco
Ribulose biphosphate, carboxylase, the enzyme that catalyzees the first step of the Calvin Cycle (addition of CO2 to RuBP)
Autotrophs
Self-feeders. Sustain themselves without eating anything derived from other living beings. Produce organic molecules from CO2 and other materials from environment. Ultimate sources of organic compounds. Almost all plants are.
Epidermis
Single tissue, layer of tightly packed cells
Cofactors
Small molecules and metal ions that assist enzymes or serve as carriers
Biosynthetic pathways (anabolic)
Small organic molecules are assembled into larger organic molecules
Active sites
Specific region of an enzyme that binds the substrate and that forms the pocket in which catalysis occurs
light dependent is.....
Splitting water
System with high free energy: Spontaneous
Spontaneous
System with low free energy: Stability
Stable
Thylakoid membrane or stroma: Carbon dioxide provides the carbon
Stroma
Thylakoid membrane or stroma: Light-independent reactions
Stroma
Thylakoid membrane or stroma: NADPH delivers the hydrogen received from water
Stroma
Thylakoid membrane or stroma: Sugars are assembled
Stroma
Pigments
Substances that absorb or reflect visible light - molecules that can absorb light
Catalytic cycle of an enzyme: Step 4
Substrates are converted into products
Catalytic cycle of an enzyme: Step 1
Substrates enter active site, enzyme changes shape so its active site embraces the substrates (induced fit)
Catalytic cycle of an enzyme: Step 2
Substrates held in active site by weak interactions such as hydrogen bonds and ionic bonds
Parts of ATP molecule
Sugar ribose Nitrogenous base adenine Chain of three phosphate groups
Phloem
Sugars and other organic products loaded into phloem for transport to other parts of plants
End products
That which is produced as the final result of an activity/process, especially the finished article in a manufacturing process
Activation energy
The amount of energy that reactants must absorb before a chemical reaction will start - Every chemical reaction between molecules involves both bond breaking and bond forming. This takes energy - The activation energy E sub A, is the initial amount of energy needed to start changing the bonds - E sub A is often supplied in the form of heat from the surroundings in a system
The electrons move through....
The electron transport chain
At the end of the electron transport chain......
The electrons enter photosystem I
Kinetic energy
The energy associated with the relative motion of objects. Moving matter can perform work by imparting motion to other matter
Potential energy
The energy that matter possess as a result of its location or spatial arrangement
Main idea of light reactions
The light reactions convert solar energy to the chemical energy of ATP and NADPH
Chlorophyll a
The main pigment of photosynthesis
Calvin cycle
The second of two major stages in photosynthesis involving fixation of atmospheric CO2 and reduction of fixed carbon into carbohydrate
Granum
The site of the first stage of photosynthesis
What happens to stomata on hot dry days? Why?
The stomata closes to conserve water. Limits access to CO2
H+ are stored in......
The thylakoid space
Each time they move,....
They lose a little energy
How can C4 plants successfully utilize the Calvin Cycle in hot, dry conditions when C3 plants would be undergoing photorespiration?
They pump CO2 into bundle sheath cells, keeping the CO2 concentration in the bundle sheath cells, keeping the CO2 concentration in the bundle sheaths high enough for RuBisco to fix CO2 rather than oxygen to minimize photo respiration
Thylakoid membrane or stroma: ATP production
Thylakoid membrane
Thylakoid membrane or stroma: Granum
Thylakoid membrane
Thylakoid membrane or stroma: Light-dependent reactions
Thylakoid membrane
Thylakoid membrane or stroma: Oxygen is formed
Thylakoid membrane
Thylakoid membrane or stroma: Sunlight energy is absorbed
Thylakoid membrane
Thylakoid membrane or stroma: The coenzyme NADP+ picks up liberated hydrogen and electrons
Thylakoid membrane
Thylakoid membrane or stroma: Water molecules are split
Thylakoid membrane
Thylakoid membrane or stroma: Where the first stage of photosynthesis proceeds
Thylakoid membrane
A cell's metabolic pathways must be.....
Tightly regulated
A molecule binds....
To the enzyme and stabilizes it in an active form
Heat
Total amount of kinetic energy due to the random motion of atoms or molecules in a body of matter; also called thermal energy. Heat is energy in its most random form
Metabolism
Totality of an organism's chemical reactions, consisting of catabolic and anabolic pathways, which manage the material and energy resources of the organism
Phosphorylation
Transfer of a phosphate group to a molecule
Oxidation-reduction reaction
Transfer of one or more electrons from one reactant to another. Loss of electrons from one substance is oxidation. Addition of electrons to another substance is reduction.
Energy may be.....
Transformed
Leaf hair
Trichomes, hairlike outgrowths of the shoot epidermis. -reduce water loss and reflect excess light -provides defense against insects
System with high free energy: Stability
Unstable
Only photosystem I is.... and only _____is produced
Used and only ATP is prodcued
Absorbed light
Used for photosynthesis
Calvin cycle main idea, occurs in the _____
Uses ATP and NADPH to convert CO2 to sugar -occurs in the stroma
CAM plants
Uses Crassulacean acid metabolism, an adaptation for photosynthesis in arid conditions. In this process, CO2 entering open stomata during the night is converted to organic acids, which release CO2 for Calvin Cycle during day, when stomata are closed
Violet-blue-green-yellow-red
Visible light portion of the electromagnetic spectrum
Light reactions split ____, release _____, produce_____ and form ______
Water Oxygen ATP NADPH
Anthocyanins
Water soluble pigments located in the vacuole that give red, purple, blue and pale yellow colors to berries, grapes, apples, red cabbage, radishes, eggplant
Cuticle
Waxy covering on stems/leaves that prevents water loss
We see these other pigments in leaves when.....
Weather gets cooler and color breaks down. Other pigments don't break down
They are missing out on any energy from the......
Yellow and orange wavelengths of light
Chloroplasts can make carbohydrate in the dark if provided with, a. ATP, NADPH, and CO2 b. an artificially induced proton gradient c. organic acids or four-carbon compounds d. a source of hydrogen e. photons and CO2
a. ATP, NADPH, and CO2
Photosynthesis is a redox process in which, a. CO2 is reduced and water is oxidized b. NADP+ is reduced and RuBP is oxidized c.CO2, NADP+, and water are reduced d. O2 acts as an oxidizing agent and water acts as a reducing agent e. G3P is reduced and the electron transport chain is oxidized
a. CO2 is reduced and water is oxidized
Oxidative phosphorylation a. respiration b. photosynthesis c. both respiration and photosynthesis d. neither respiration nor photosynthesis
a. respiration
Reduction of NAD+ a. respiration b. photosynthesis c. both respiration and photosynthesis d. neither respiration nor photosynthesis
a. respiration
Reduction of oxygen a. respiration b. photosynthesis c. both respiration and photosynthesis d. neither respiration nor photosynthesis
a. respiration
A spectrophotometer can be used to measure, a. the absorption spectrum of a substance b. the action spectrum of a reaction c. the amount of energy in a photon d. the wavelength of visible light e. the efficiency of photsynthesis
a. the absorption spectrum of a substance
Again light excites the electron to a primary acceptor......
and then passes the electron to NADP+ to form NADPH -2 electrons bond NADP+ to H+
Accessory pigments within chloroplasts are responsible for, a. driving the splitting of water molecules b. absorbing protons of different wavelengths of light and passing that energy to P680 or P700 c. providing electrons to the reaction-center chlorophyll after photoexcited electrons pass to NADP+ d. pumping H+ across the thylakoid membrane to create a proton-motive force e. anchoring chlorophyll a within the reaction center
b. absorbing protons of different wavelengths of light and passing that energy to P680 or P700
In the chemiosmotic synthesis of ATP in a chloroplast, H+ diffuses through the ATP synthase, a. from the stroma into the thylakoid space b. from the thylakoid space into the stroma c. from the intermembrane space into the matrix d. from the cytoplasm into the intermembrane space e. from the matrix into the stroma
b. from the thylakoid space into the stroma
Reduction of CO2 a. respiration b. photosynthesis c. both respiration and photosynthesis d. neither respiration nor photosynthesis
b. photosynthesis
Six molecules of G3P formed from the fixation of 3CO2 in the Calvin cycle are used to produce, a. three molecules of glucose b. three molecules of RuBP and one G3P c. one molecule of glucose and four molecules of 3-phosphoglycerate d. one G3P and three four-carbon intermediates e. none of the above, because three molecules of G3P result from three turns of the Calvin Cycle
b. three molecules of RuBP and one G3P
Chemiosmotic synthesis of ATP a. respiration b. photosynthesis c. both respiration and photosynthesis d. neither respiration nor photosynthesis
c. both respiration and photosynthesis
A difference between electron transport in photosynthesis and respiration is that in photosynthesis, a. NADPH rather than NADH passes electrons to the electron transport chain b. ATP synthase releases ATP into the stroma rather than into the cytosol c. light provides the energy to push electrons to the top of the electron chain, rather than energy from the oxidation of food molecules d. an H+ concentration gradient rather than a proton-motive force drives the phosphorylation of ATP e. Both a and c are correct
c. light provides the energy to push electrons to the top of the electron chain, rather than energy from the oxidation of food molecules
The chlorophyll known as P680 has its electron "holes" filled by electrons from, a. photosystem i b. photosystem ii c. water d. NADPH e. accessory pigments
c. water
Light independent reactions
calvin cycle 2nd stage of photosynthesis, occurs in stroma Set of reactions in photosynthesis that do not require light; energy from ATP and NADPH us used to build high-energy compounds such as sugar; also called the Calvin Cycle
How many turns of the Calvin Cycle does it take to produce one molecule of glucose? a. 1 b. 2 c. 3 d. 6 e. 12
d. 6
Which of the following processes or structures is mismatched with its location? a. light reactions- grana b. electron transport chain- thylakoid membrane c. Calvin cycle- stroma d. ATP synthase- double membrane surrounding chloroplast e. splitting of water- thylakoid space
d. ATP synthase- double membrane surrounding chloroplast
Which of the following statements is false? a. When isolated chlorophyll molecules absorb photons, their electrons fall back to ground state, giving off heat and light b. Accessory pigments, cyclic electron flow, and photorespiration may all contribute to photoprotection, protecting plants from the detrimental effects of intense light c. In the cyclic electron flow of purple sulfur bacteria, the electron transport chain pumps H+ across a membrane, creating a proton-motive force used in ATP synthesis d. In both photosynthetic prokaryotes and eukaryotes, ATP synthase catalyze the production of ATP within the cytosol of the cell e. In sulfur bacteria, H2S is the hydrogen (and this electron) source for photosynthesis
d. In both photosynthetic prokaryotes and eukaryotes, ATP synthase catalyze the production of ATP within the cytosol of the cell
In C4 plants, a. initial carbon fixation takes place in the mesophyll cells b. photorespiration requires more energy than it does in C3 plants c. the Calvin cycle, which takes place in the bundle-sheath cells, uses PEP carboxylase instead of rubisco because of its greater affinity for CO2 d. a and b are correct e. a and c are correct
d. a and b are correct
Rubisco, a. reduces CO2 to G3P b. regenerates RuBP with the aid of ATP c. combines electrons and H+ to reduce NADP+ to NADPH d. adds CO2 to RuBP in the carbon fixation stage e. transfers electrons from NADPH to 1, 3-phosphoglycerate to produce G3P
d. adds CO2 to RuBP in the carbon fixation stage
How does cyclic electron flow differ from linear electron flow? a. no NADPH is produced by cyclic electron flow b. no O2 is produced by cyclic electron flow c. the cytochrome complex in the electron transport chain is not involved in cyclic electron flow d. both a and b are correct e. a, b, and c are correct
d. both a and b are correct
Oxidation of NADP+ a. respiration b. photosynthesis c. both respiration and photosynthesis d. neither respiration nor photosynthesis
d. neither respiration nor photosynthesis
In green plants, most of the ATP for synthesis of proteins, cytoplasmic streaming, and other cellular activities comes directly from, a. photosystem I b. photosystem II c. the Calvin Cycle d. oxidative phosphorylation e. photophosphorylation
d. oxidative phosphorylation
Both NADPH and ATP from the light reactions are needed, a. in the carbon fixation stage to provide energy and reducing power to rubisco b. to regenerate three RuBP from five G3P c. to combine two molecules of G3P to produce glucose d. to reduce 3-phosphoglycerate to G3P e. to reduce the H+ concentration in the stroma and contribute to the proton-motive force
d. to reduce 3-phosphoglycerate to G3P
A photosystem may have 200-300 .......
different pigment molecules
Linear electron flow along with chemiosmosis in the chloroplast results in the formation of.... a. ATP only b. ATP and NADPH c. ATP and G3P d. ATP and O2 e. ATP, NADPH, and O2
e. ATP, NADPH, and O2
Which of the following substances is/are the final electron acceptors for the electron transport chains in the light reactions of photosynthesis and in cellular respiration? a. O2 in both b. CO2 in both c. H2O in the light reactions, and O2 in respiration d. P700 and NAD+ in the light reactions, and NAD+ or FAD in respiration e. NAD+ in the light reactions, and O2 in respiration
e. NAD+ in the light reactions, and O2 in respiration
CAM plants avoid photorespiration by, a. keeping their stomata closed during the day b. performing the Calvin cycle at night c. fixing CO2 into four-carbon compounds in the mesophyll, which then release CO2 in the bundle-sheath cells d. storing water in their succulent stems and leaves e. fixing CO2 into organic acids during the night, which then provide CO2 during the day
e. fixing CO2 into organic acids during the night, which then provide CO2 during the day
Which of the following parts of an illuminated plant cell would you expect to have the lowest pH? a. nucleus b. cytosol c. chloroplast d. stroma of chloroplast e. thylakoid space
e. thylakoid space
Each enzyme has an......
optimal temperature and pH in which it can function
When a photon of light excites a pigment it generally ......
passes it on to a neighboring pigment
it donates an electron to an electron acceptor molecule that......
starts the electron transport system
A chlorophyll a is.....
the reaction center
What happens to the absorbed energy? Energy flows randomly among pigments of a photosystem until......
trapped by reaction center