Transcript Document

LECTURE PRESENTATIONS
For CAMPBELL BIOLOGY, NINTH EDITION
Jane B. Reece, Lisa A. Urry, Michael L. Cain, Steven A. Wasserman, Peter V. Minorsky, Robert B. Jackson
Chapter 10
Photosynthesis
Lectures by
Erin Barley
Kathleen Fitzpatrick
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Overview: The Process That Feeds the
Biosphere
• Photosynthesis is the process that converts
solar energy into chemical energy
• Directly or indirectly, photosynthesis nourishes
almost the entire living world
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
• Autotrophs sustain themselves without eating
anything derived from other organisms
• Autotrophs are the producers of the biosphere,
producing organic molecules from CO2 and other
inorganic molecules
• Almost all plants are photoautotrophs, using
the energy of sunlight to make organic molecules
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
• Photosynthesis occurs in plants, algae, certain
other protists, and some prokaryotes
• These organisms feed not only themselves but
also most of the living world
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
BioFlix: Photosynthesis
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 10.2
(b) Multicellular
alga
(a) Plants
(d) Cyanobacteria
(c) Unicellular
protists
10 m
(e) Purple sulfur
1 m
bacteria
40 m
• Heterotrophs obtain their organic material from
other organisms
• Heterotrophs are the consumers of the
biosphere
• Almost all heterotrophs, including humans,
depend on photoautotrophs for food and O2
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
• The Earth’s supply of fossil fuels was formed
from the remains of organisms that died
hundreds of millions of years ago
• In a sense, fossil fuels represent stores of
solar energy from the distant past
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 10.3
Concept 10.1: Photosynthesis converts
light energy to the chemical energy of food
• Chloroplasts are structurally similar to and
likely evolved from photosynthetic bacteria
• The structural organization of these cells
allows for the chemical reactions of
photosynthesis
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Chloroplasts: The Sites of Photosynthesis
in Plants
• Leaves are the major locations of
photosynthesis
• Their green color is from chlorophyll, the
green pigment within chloroplasts
• Chloroplasts are found mainly in cells of the
mesophyll, the interior (middle) tissue of the
leaf
• Each mesophyll cell contains 30–40
chloroplasts
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
• CO2 enters and O2 exits the leaf through
microscopic pores called stomata (singular =
stoma)
• The chlorophyll is in the membranes of
thylakoids (connected sacs in the chloroplast);
thylakoids may be stacked in columns called
grana
• Chloroplasts also contain stRoma, a dense
interior fluid
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 10.4a
Leaf cross section
Chloroplasts Vein
Mesophyll
Stomata
Chloroplast
CO2
O2
Mesophyll
cell
20 m
Figure 10.4b
Chloroplast
Thylakoid
Stroma Granum Thylakoid
space
1 m
Outer
membrane
Intermembrane
space
Inner
membrane
Tracking Atoms Through Photosynthesis:
Scientific Inquiry
• Photosynthesis is a complex series of reactions
that can be summarized as the following
equation:
6 CO2 + 12 H2O + Light energy  C6H12O6 + 6 O2 + 6 H2O
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
The Splitting of Water
• Chloroplasts split H2O into hydrogen and
oxygen, incorporating the electrons of hydrogen
into sugar molecules and releasing oxygen as a
by-product
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 10.5
Reactants:
Products:
6 CO2
C6H12O6
12 H2O
6 H2O
6 O2
Photosynthesis as a Redox Process
• Photosynthesis reverses the direction of
electron flow compared to respiration
• Photosynthesis is a redox process in which H2O
is oxidized and CO2 is reduced
• Photosynthesis is an endergonic process; the
energy boost is provided by light
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 10.UN01
becomes reduced
Energy  6 CO2  6 H2O
C6 H12 O6  6 O2
becomes oxidized
The Two Stages of Photosynthesis:
A Preview
• Photosynthesis consists of the light
reactions (the photo part) and Calvin cycle
(the synthesis part)
• The light reactions (in the thylakoids)
–
–
–
–
Split H2O
Release O2
Reduce NADP+ to NADPH
Generate ATP from ADP by
photophosphorylation
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
• The Calvin cycle (in the stroma) forms sugar
from CO2, using ATP and NADPH
• The Calvin cycle begins with carbon fixation,
incorporating CO2 into organic molecules
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 10.6-1
H2O
Light
NADP
ADP
+ Pi
Light
Reactions
Chloroplast
Figure 10.6-2
H2O
Light
NADP
ADP
+ Pi
Light
Reactions
ATP
NADPH
Chloroplast
O2
Figure 10.6-3
CO2
H2O
Light
NADP
ADP
+ Pi
Light
Reactions
ATP
NADPH
Chloroplast
O2
Calvin
Cycle
Figure 10.6-4
CO2
H2O
Light
NADP
ADP
+ Pi
Light
Reactions
Calvin
Cycle
ATP
NADPH
Chloroplast
O2
[CH2O]
(sugar)
Concept 10.2: The light reactions convert
solar energy to the chemical energy of
ATP and NADPH
• Chloroplasts are solar-powered chemical
factories
• Their thylakoids transform light energy into the
chemical energy of ATP and NADPH
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
The Nature of Sunlight
• Light is a form of electromagnetic energy, also
called electromagnetic radiation
• Like other electromagnetic energy, light travels in
rhythmic waves
• Wavelength is the distance between crests of
waves
• Wavelength determines the type of
electromagnetic energy
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
• The electromagnetic spectrum is the entire
range of electromagnetic energy, or radiation
• Visible light consists of wavelengths (including
those that drive photosynthesis) that produce
colors we can see
• Light also behaves as though it consists of
discrete particles, called photons
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 10.7
105
nm 103 nm
103
1 nm
Gamma
X-rays
rays
UV
nm
1m
(109 nm)
106 nm
Infrared
Microwaves
103 m
Radio
waves
Visible light
380
450
500
Shorter wavelength
Higher energy
550
600
650
700
750 nm
Longer wavelength
Lower energy
Animation: Light and Pigments
Right-click slide / select “Play”
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Photosynthetic Pigments: The Light
Receptors
• Pigments are substances that absorb visible light
• Different pigments absorb different wavelengths
• Wavelengths that are not absorbed are reflected
or transmitted
• Leaves appear green because chlorophyll
reflects and transmits green light
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 10.8
Light
Reflected
light
Chloroplast
Absorbed
light
Granum
Transmitted
light
• A spectrophotometer measures a pigment’s
ability to absorb various wavelengths
• This machine sends light through pigments and
measures the fraction of light transmitted at each
wavelength
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 10.9
TECHNIQUE
Refracting Chlorophyll Photoelectric
solution
tube
White prism
Galvanometer
light
Slit moves to
pass light
of selected
wavelength.
Green
light
High transmittance
(low absorption):
Chlorophyll absorbs
very little green light.
Blue
light
Low transmittance
(high absorption):
Chlorophyll absorbs
most blue light.
• An absorption spectrum is a graph plotting a
pigment’s light absorption versus wavelength
• The absorption spectrum of chlorophyll a
suggests that violet-blue and red light work best
for photosynthesis
• An action spectrum profiles the relative
effectiveness of different wavelengths of
radiation in driving a process
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
(a) Absorption
spectra
(b) Action spectrum
Absorption of light by
chloroplast pigments
RESULTS
Rate of photosynthesis
(measured by O2 release)
Figure 10.10
Chlorophyll a
Chlorophyll b
Carotenoids
400
500
600
Wavelength of light (nm)
400
500
600
700
700
Aerobic bacteria
Filament
of alga
(c) Engelmann’s
experiment
400
500
600
700
• The action spectrum of photosynthesis was first
demonstrated in 1883 by Theodor W. Engelmann
• In his experiment, he exposed different segments
of a filamentous alga to different wavelengths
• Areas receiving wavelengths favorable to
photosynthesis produced excess O2 .
• What does that tell you about the expt?
• He used the growth of aerobic bacteria clustered
along the alga as a measure of O2 production
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
• Chlorophyll a is the main photosynthetic
pigment
• Accessory pigments, such as chlorophyll b,
broaden the spectrum used for photosynthesis
• Accessory pigments called carotenoids absorb
excessive light that would damage chlorophyll
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 10.11
CH3
CH3 in chlorophyll a
CHO in chlorophyll b
Porphyrin ring
Hydrocarbon tail
(H atoms not shown)
Excitation of Chlorophyll by Light
• When a pigment absorbs light, it goes from a
ground state to an excited state, which is
unstable
• When excited electrons fall back to the ground
state, photons are given off, an afterglow called
fluorescence
• If illuminated, an isolated solution of chlorophyll
will fluoresce, giving off light and heat
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 10.12
Energy of electron
e
Excited
state
Heat
Photon
(fluorescence)
Photon
Chlorophyll
molecule
Ground
state
(a) Excitation of isolated chlorophyll molecule
(b) Fluorescence
A Photosystem: A Reaction-Center Complex
Associated with Light-Harvesting
Complexes
• A photosystem consists of a reaction-center
complex (a type of protein complex) surrounded
by light-harvesting complexes
• The light-harvesting complexes (pigment
molecules bound to proteins) transfer the energy
of photons to the reaction center
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 10.13
Thylakoid membrane
Lightharvesting
complexes
Reactioncenter
complex
STROMA
Primary
electron
acceptor
e
Transfer
of energy
Pigment
Special pair of
molecules
chlorophyll a
molecules
THYLAKOID SPACE
(INTERIOR OF THYLAKOID)
(a) How a photosystem harvests light
Thylakoid membrane
Photosystem
Photon
Chlorophyll
Protein
subunits
(b) Structure of photosystem II
STROMA
THYLAKOID
SPACE
Figure 10.13a
Photosystem
Lightharvesting
complexes
Thylakoid membrane
Photon
Reactioncenter
complex
STROMA
Primary
electron
acceptor
e
Transfer
of energy
Pigment
Special pair of
molecules
chlorophyll a
molecules
THYLAKOID SPACE
(INTERIOR OF THYLAKOID)
(a) How a photosystem harvests light
Thylakoid membrane
Figure 10.13b
Chlorophyll
Protein
subunits
(b) Structure of photosystem II
STROMA
THYLAKOID
SPACE
• A primary electron acceptor in the reaction
center accepts excited electrons and is reduced
as a result
• Solar-powered transfer of an electron from a
chlorophyll a molecule to the primary
electron acceptor is the first step of the light
reactions
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
• There are two types of photosystems in the
thylakoid membrane
• Photosystem II (PS II) functions first (the numbers
reflect order of discovery) and is best at absorbing a
wavelength of 680 nm
• The reaction-center chlorophyll a of PS II is
called P680
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
• Photosystem I (PS I) is best at absorbing a
wavelength of 700 nm
• The reaction-center chlorophyll a of PS I is
called P700
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Linear Electron Flow
• During the light reactions, there are two possible
routes for electron flow: cyclic and linear
• Linear electron flow, the primary pathway,
involves both photosystems and produces ATP
and NADPH using light energy
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
• A photon hits a pigment and its energy is passed
among pigment molecules until it excites P680
• An excited electron from P680 is transferred to
the primary electron acceptor (we now call it
P680+)
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 10.14-1
Primary
acceptor
e
2
P680
1 Light
Pigment
molecules
Photosystem II
(PS II)
• P680+ is a very strong oxidizing agent
• H2O is split by enzymes, and the electrons are
transferred from the hydrogen atoms to P680+,
thus reducing it to P680
• O2 is released as a by-product of this reaction
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 10.14-2
Primary
acceptor
2 H
+
1/ O
2
2
H2O
e
2
3
e
e
P680
1 Light
Pigment
molecules
Photosystem II
(PS II)
• Each electron “falls” down an electron transport
chain from the primary electron acceptor of PS II
to PS I
• Energy released by the fall drives the creation of
a proton gradient across the thylakoid
membrane
• Diffusion of H+ (protons) across the membrane
drives ATP synthesis
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 10.14-3
4
Primary
acceptor
1/
2
H
2
+
O2
H2O
e
2
Pq
Cytochrome
complex
3
Pc
e
e
5
P680
1 Light
ATP
Pigment
molecules
Photosystem II
(PS II)
• In PS I (like PS II), transferred light energy
excites P700, which loses an electron to an
electron acceptor
• P700+ (P700 that is missing an electron) accepts
an electron passed down from PS II via the
electron transport chain
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 10.14-4
4
Primary
acceptor
1/
2
H
2
+
O2
H2O
e
2
Primary
acceptor
e
Pq
Cytochrome
complex
3
Pc
e
e
P700
5
P680
Light
1 Light
6
ATP
Pigment
molecules
Photosystem II
(PS II)
Photosystem I
(PS I)
• Each electron “falls” down an electron transport
chain from the primary electron acceptor of
PS I to the protein ferredoxin (Fd)
• The electrons are then transferred to NADP+ and
reduce it to NADPH
• The electrons of NADPH are available for the
reactions of the Calvin cycle
• This process also removes an H+ from the
stroma
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 10.14-5
4
Primary
acceptor
2
H
+
1/ O
2
2
H2O
e
2
Primary
acceptor
e
Pq
7
Fd
e 
e
Cytochrome
complex
8
NADP
reductase
3
Pc
e
e
P700
5
P680
Light
1 Light
6
ATP
Pigment
molecules
Photosystem II
(PS II)
Photosystem I
(PS I)
NADP
+ H
NADPH
Figure 10.15
e
e
e
e
Mill
makes
ATP
e
NADPH
e
e
ATP
Photosystem II
Photosystem I
Cyclic Electron Flow
• Cyclic electron flow uses only photosystem I
and produces ATP, but not NADPH
• No oxygen is released
• Cyclic electron flow generates surplus ATP,
satisfying the higher demand in the Calvin cycle
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 10.16
Primary
acceptor
Primary
acceptor
Fd
Fd
Pq
NADP
reductase
Cytochrome
complex
NADPH
Pc
Photosystem I
Photosystem II
ATP
NADP
+ H
• Some organisms such as purple sulfur bacteria
have PS I but not PS II
• Cyclic electron flow is thought to have evolved
before linear electron flow
• Cyclic electron flow may protect cells from
light-induced damage
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
A Comparison of Chemiosmosis in
Chloroplasts and Mitochondria
• Chloroplasts and mitochondria generate ATP
by chemiosmosis, but use different sources
of energy
• Mitochondria transfer chemical energy from
food to ATP; chloroplasts transform light energy
into the chemical energy of ATP
• Spatial organization of chemiosmosis differs
between chloroplasts and mitochondria but also
shows similarities
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
• In mitochondria, protons are pumped to the
intermembrane space and drive ATP synthesis
as they diffuse back into the mitochondrial matrix
• In chloroplasts, protons are pumped into the
thylakoid space and drive ATP synthesis as they
diffuse back into the stroma
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 10.17
Chloroplast
Mitochondrion
CHLOROPLAST
STRUCTURE
MITOCHONDRION
STRUCTURE
H
Intermembrane
space
Inner
membrane
Diffusion
Electron
transport
chain
Thylakoid
space
Thylakoid
membrane
ATP
synthase
Matrix
Stroma
ADP  P i
Key
[H ]
Higher
Lower [H ]
H
ATP
• ATP and NADPH are produced on the side
facing the stroma, where the Calvin cycle takes
place
• In summary, light reactions generate ATP and
increase the potential energy of electrons by
moving them from H2O to NADPH
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 10.18
STROMA
(low H concentration)
Photosystem II
4 H+
Light
Cytochrome
complex
Photosystem I
Light
NADP
reductase
3
NADP + H
Fd
Pq
H2O
NADPH
Pc
2
1
THYLAKOID SPACE
(high H concentration)
1/
2
O2
+2 H+
4 H+
To
Calvin
Cycle
Thylakoid
membrane
STROMA
(low H concentration)
ATP
synthase
ADP
+
Pi
ATP
H+
Concept 10.3: The Calvin cycle uses the
chemical energy of ATP and NADPH to
reduce CO2 to sugar
• The Calvin cycle, like the citric acid cycle,
regenerates its starting material after molecules
enter and leave the cycle
• The cycle builds sugar from smaller molecules
by using ATP (ANABOLIC!) and the reducing
power of electrons carried by NADPH
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
• Carbon enters the cycle as CO2 and leaves as
a sugar named glyceraldehyde 3-phospate
(G3P)
• For net synthesis of 1 G3P, the cycle must take
place three times, fixing 3 molecules of CO2
• The Calvin cycle has 3 phases:
1. Carbon fixation (catalyzed by rubisco)
2. Reduction
3. Regeneration of the CO2 acceptor (RuBP)
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 10.19-3
Input
(Entering one
CO2 at a time)
3
Phase 1: Carbon fixation
Rubisco
3 P
Short-lived
intermediate
P
6
P
3-Phosphoglycerate
P
3P
Ribulose bisphosphate
(RuBP)
6
ATP
6 ADP
3 ADP
3
Calvin
Cycle
6 P
P
1,3-Bisphosphoglycerate
ATP
6 NADPH
Phase 3:
Regeneration of
the CO2 acceptor
(RuBP)
6 NADP
6 Pi
P
5
G3P
6
P
Glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate
(G3P)
Photosynthesis
Animations
1
P
G3P
(a sugar)
Output
Glucose and
other organic
compounds
Phase 2:
Reduction
Concept 10.4: Alternative mechanisms of
carbon fixation have evolved in hot, arid
climates
• Dehydration is a problem for plants, sometimes
requiring trade-offs with other metabolic
processes, especially photosynthesis
• On hot, dry days, plants close stomata, which
conserves H2O but also limits
photosynthesis- the closing of stomata reduces
access to CO2 and causes O2 to build up
• These conditions favor an apparently wasteful
process called photorespiration
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Photorespiration: An Evolutionary Relic?
• In most plants (C3 plants), initial fixation of
CO2, via rubisco, forms a three-carbon
compound (3-phosphoglycerate)
• In photorespiration, rubisco adds O2 instead of
CO2 in the Calvin cycle, producing a twocarbon compound
• Photorespiration consumes O2 and organic fuel
and releases CO2 without producing ATP or
sugar
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
• Photorespiration may be an evolutionary relic
because rubisco first evolved at a time when the
atmosphere had far less O2 and more CO2
• Photorespiration limits damaging products of
light reactions that build up in the absence of the
Calvin cycle
• In many plants, photorespiration is a problem
because on a hot, dry day it can drain as much
as 50% of the carbon fixed by the Calvin cycle
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
C4 Plants
• C4 plants minimize the cost of photorespiration
by incorporating CO2 into four-carbon
compounds in mesophyll cells
• This step requires the enzyme PEP
carboxylase
• PEP carboxylase has a higher affinity for CO2
than rubisco does; it can fix CO2 even when CO2
concentrations are low
• These four-carbon compounds are exported to
bundle-sheath cells, where they release CO2
that is then used in the Calvin cycle
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 10.20
The C4 pathway
C4 leaf anatomy
Mesophyll
cell
PEP carboxylase
Mesophyll cell
Photosynthetic
cells of C4
Bundleplant leaf
sheath
cell
Oxaloacetate (4C)
Vein
(vascular tissue)
PEP (3C)
ADP
Malate (4C)
Stoma
Bundlesheath
cell
CO2
ATP
Pyruvate (3C)
CO2
Calvin
Cycle
Sugar
Vascular
tissue
Figure 10.20a
C4 leaf anatomy
Photosynthetic
cells of C4
plant leaf
Mesophyll cell
Bundlesheath
cell
Vein
(vascular tissue)
Stoma
Figure 10.20b
The C4 pathway
Mesophyll
cell
PEP carboxylase
Oxaloacetate (4C)
PEP (3C)
ADP
Malate (4C)
Bundlesheath
cell
CO2
ATP
Pyruvate (3C)
CO2
Calvin
Cycle
Sugar
Vascular
tissue
• In the last 150 years since the Industrial
Revolution, CO2 levels have risen greatly
• Increasing levels of CO2 may affect C3 and C4
plants differently, perhaps changing the relative
abundance of these species
• The effects of such changes are unpredictable
and a cause for concern
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
CAM Plants
• Some plants, including succulents, use
crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) to fix
carbon
• CAM plants open their stomata at night,
incorporating CO2 into organic acids
• Stomata close during the day, and CO2 is
released from organic acids and used in the
Calvin cycle
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 10.21
Sugarcane
Pineapple
C4
Mesophyll Organic acid
cell
CAM
CO2
1 CO2 incorporated
(carbon fixation) Organic acid
Calvin
Cycle
Night
CO2
CO2
Bundlesheath
cell
CO2
2 CO2 released
to the Calvin
cycle
Sugar
(a) Spatial separation of steps
Calvin
Cycle
Day
Sugar
(b) Temporal separation of steps
The Importance of Photosynthesis: A Review
• The energy entering chloroplasts as sunlight gets
stored as chemical energy in organic compounds
• Sugar made in the chloroplasts supplies chemical
energy and carbon skeletons to synthesize the
organic molecules of cells
• Plants store excess sugar as starch in structures
such as roots, tubers, seeds, and fruits
• In addition to food production, photosynthesis
produces the O2 in our atmosphere
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Figure 10.22
H2O
CO2
Light
NADP
ADP
+ Pi
Light
Reactions:
Photosystem II
Electron transport chain
Photosystem I
Electron transport chain
RuBP
3-Phosphoglycerate
Calvin
Cycle
ATP
NADPH
G3P
Starch
(storage)
Chloroplast
O2
Sucrose (export)
Figure 10.UN02
Primary
acceptor
Primary
acceptor
H2O
O2
Fd
Pq
NADP
reductase
Cytochrome
complex
Pc
Photosystem II
ATP
Photosystem I
NADP
+ H
NADPH
Figure 10.UN03
3 CO2
Carbon fixation
3  5C
6  3C
Calvin
Cycle
Regeneration of
CO2 acceptor
5  3C
Reduction
1 G3P (3C)
Figure 10.UN05
Figure 10.UN07
Figure 10.UN08
LECTURE PRESENTATIONS
For CAMPBELL BIOLOGY, NINTH EDITION
Jane B. Reece, Lisa A. Urry, Michael L. Cain, Steven A. Wasserman, Peter V. Minorsky, Robert B. Jackson
Chapter 10
Photosynthesis
Questions prepared by
Lectures
by
Jung Choi
Erin
Barley
Georgia Institute
of Technology
Kathleen Fitzpatrick
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Does a Tree’s Biomass Come from the Soil?
A 17th-century scientist named van Helmont planted a willow sapling in a large
pot with 200 pounds of dry soil and allowed it to grow, giving it only rainwater or
distilled water. He weighed the soil and tree (with roots) before planting and after
five years of growth. What information do you need to predict the weight of the
soil remaining after five years with 99% accuracy?
a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
the weight of the tree at start and after five years
the percentage of the tree weight that is water
the weight of leaves lost by the tree each fall
the weight of all the water added
none of the above
Photosynthesis and Biomass
The biomass (dry weight) of a tree comes
primarily from
a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
soil.
water.
air.
organic fertilizer (manure, detritus).
light.
Photosynthesis and Organic Carbon
The organic carbon in a tree comes primarily from
a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
soil.
water.
air.
organic fertilizer (manure, detritus).
light.
What colors of light will drive photosynthesis by
green plants most efficiently?
a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
red only
yellow only
green only
blue only
red and blue
Origin of Oxygen Gas
Which experiment will produce
18O ?
2
a) experiment 1
b) experiment 2
c) both experiment 1 and
experiment 2
d) neither experiment
Oxygen, Earth History, and Evolution
Which evolutionary development caused the initial
oxygenation of Earth’s atmosphere?
a) the evolution of the earliest photosynthetic organisms
that had only PSI
b) the evolution of cyanobacteria with PSI + PSII
c) the evolution of the first land plants
d) the evolution of the woody plants
e) the evolution of flowering plants
NADPH is produced by
a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
respiration in the mitochondria.
the citric acid cycle.
photosystem II.
photosystem I.
photorespiration.
Photosystem I and Cyclic Photophosphorylation
Photosynthetic bacteria that have only photosystem I
a)
b)
c)
d)
can split water molecules to produce oxygen.
cannot fix carbon dioxide.
generate ATP but not NADPH.
can reduce NADP+ to NADPH but cannot
make ATP through photophosphorylation.
e) can reduce NADP+ to NADPH and make ATP
through cyclic photophosphorylation.
How are the light reactions and the
Calvin cycle connected?
a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
The light reactions provide ATP to the Calvin cycle, and the Calvin
cycle provide NADPH for the light reactions.
The light reactions provide ATP and NADPH to the Calvin cycle, and
the Calvin cycle returns ADP, Pi, and NADP+ to the light reactions.
The light reactions provide ATP and NADPH to the Calvin cycle, and
the Calvin cycle returns reduced sugars to the light reactions.
The light reactions provide NADPH to the Calvin cycle, and the Calvin
cycle provides RuBP to the light reactions.
The light reactions provide RuBP to the Calvin cycle, and the Calvin
cycle returns G3P to the light reactions.
Calvin-Benson Experiment to Identify CO2 Acceptor
In this diagram, compound X is the CO2 acceptor. If
CO2 is cut off, then
a) X and 3PG will
both increase.
b) X will increase,
3PG decrease.
c) X will decrease,
3PG increase.
d) X and 3PG will
both decrease.
Calvin-Benson Experiment to Identify CO2 Acceptor
In this diagram, compound X is the CO2 acceptor. If light is
cut off, then
a)X and 3PG will
both increase.
b)X will increase,
3PG decrease.
c)X will decrease,
3PG increase.
d)X and 3PG will
both decrease.
Photorespiration occurs because
a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
rubisco can use oxygen as a substrate when CO2 levels are
low and oxygen levels are high.
linear electron flow cannot provide the Calvin cycle with
enough ATP.
leaf cells use photorespiration to make ATP for cellular work
outside the chloroplasts.
C4 plants operate a CO2 shuttle at a cost of extra ATP,
provided by photorespiration.
plants need a way to consume the oxygen they produce.
Photosynthesis and Respiration
A flask of duckweed in water is placed under a bank of lights on a 12hour light, 12-hour dark cycle, next to a control flask containing only
water. Assuming no change in water temperature, which flask will
have the lowest dissolved oxygen (DO) concentration, at what time?
a) DO will be the same between the control and the
duckweed-containing flask.
b) DO will always be higher in the flask with duckweed
compared to the control.
c) DO will always be lower in the flask with duckweed
compared to the control.
d) The flask with duckweed will have the lowest DO at the end
of the dark cycle and the highest DO at the end of the light
cycle.
Which metabolic pathways were present
in the last universal common ancestor
(are present in all three domains of life)?
a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
Calvin cycle
glycolysis
citric acid cycle
chemiosmotic ATP synthesis
all of the above
Carbon Fixation and Climate Change
How will increasing atmospheric CO2 levels affect
growth of terrestrial plants?
a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
All plants will grow faster.
Most plants will be adversely affected.
C3 plants will grow faster, with no effect on C4 plants.
C4 plants will thrive, while C3 plants will suffer.
It depends on changes in the local climate.