Introduction to Cell & Molecular Biology (BIOL121) - Dr. S.G. Saupe (ssaupe@csbsju.edu); Biology Department, College of St. Benedict/St. John's University, Collegeville, MN 56321 |
AUTOTROPHIC NUTRITION
I. Overview of photosynthesis
Photosynthesis
can be defined as the light-driven synthesis of carbohydrate. Recall the
equation for this reaction:
CO2 + H2O + light + chloroplast
→ (CH20)n + O2From this simple equation we can make some elegant conclusions:
A. Photosynthesis is a redox reaction.
CO2 is reduced to a carbohydrate [ (CH20)n ]
Water is oxidized (to oxygen)
Water supplies the electrons for the reduction of carbon dioxide; water is cleaved in the process yielding oxygen as a byproduct.
Light provides the energy for the reduction. Light essentially splits water (photolysis) to yield electrons and protons for photosynthesis.
B. Photosynthesis is an energy conversion
process.
During photosynthesis, light energy is ultimately converted to chemical energy (carbohydrate). In a
broad sense, it is an example of the 1st Law of Thermodynamics (recall that
energy cannot be created nor destroyed, but it can be changed from one form
to another).
C. Steve's extra special BLACK BOX model for photosynthesis.
Diagram provided in class. This model shows that there are three major
energy conversions during photosynthesis:
radiant energy (sunlight) → electrical energy (passage of electrons via a series of carrier) → chemical energy (ATP, NADPH; labile =unstable) → chemical energy (carbohydrates; stable).
The first two conversions are part of the light-dependent reactions that occur in the thylakoid membranes of the chloroplast; the last step refers to the light-independent reactions (Calvin cycle) that occur in the stroma.
II. Leaves - the primary photosynthetic organs
Leaves are perfect solar collectors. These organs are broad and flat to allow for
efficient light harvest. The leaves are broad to maximize surface area for light harvest
and they are thin since light cannot penetrate too deeply into the leaf (the amount of
light decreases exponentially with distance). As an aside, although the majority of light
is absorbed near the leaf surface, in some situations, plant tissues can act like fiber optic
cables that can funnel some light deeply into the plant body.
Even within the thin leaf, most chloroplasts are found in the upper layer of cells, the palisade layer, which is a tissue layer just beneath the upper epidermis of the leaf. This makes "sense" since these cells receive the greatest amount of light of any region in the leaf.
Leaves double as a means to exchange photosynthetic gases (take up carbon dioxide and get rid of oxygen) with the environment. Leaves have pores in the surface (stomata) that regulate the entry/exit of gases and prevent the loss of excessive water.
The spongy layer of the leaf acts like a "lung" increasing the internal surface area and provides for more rapid diffusion within the leaf. Note again that leaves are thin - this avoids the need for lungs or other type of pump to move gases. Since diffusion rates are inversely related to distance, simple diffusion can account for gas movements into/out of a leaf. An added advantage of having large leaves for light harvest is that they provide lots of surface area for absorption of carbon dioxide.
Veins and vascular tissue supply the leaf with water (xylem) and transport the endproducts to other parts of the plant (phloem).
III. Chloroplasts - specialized
organelles that carry out the process of photosynthesis
A. Structure
Remember the cell unit? To jog your memory, reread the cell
chapter. Terms that you should know are thylakoid (or lamellae), inter-membrane
space = lumen, double membrane, stroma, granum (grana).
B. Chemistry Chloroplasts contain....
1. Assorted Goodies.
- DNA - circular loop, similar to a bacterial chromosome though much smaller - only enough nucleotides (ca. 120-160 kilobases) to code for about 120 proteins;
- RNA;
- ribosomes;
- proteins - some are encoded by the genes in the nucleus, others by the genes in the chloroplast DNA. For example, rubisco, an important enzyme, has 2 different subunits, one coded by each source. The nuclear genes are essential for chloroplast function, but the reverse is not true.
2. Pigments.
These make up about 7% of the chloroplast. A pigment is any molecule with a color that absorbs light. These occur in the thylakoids because they are highly hydrophobic (fat-soluble). There are two major groups of pigments in higher plants - chlorophylls and carotenoids/xanthophylls.
- Chlorophylls - green; look like a tennis racket. The head of the racket is a ring system based on the structure of heme (a type of porphyrin). Magnesium is inserted in the ring. Chlorophyll also has a long (C-20) hydrocarbon tail. The tail is important for positioning the molecule in the membrane. The interaction of the chlorophyll with the membrane is non-covalent and is important because it ultimately determines the physical properties of the chlorophyll.
- Carotene/xanthophylls - both are large hydrophobic molecules (C-40). Carotenes are hydrocarbons; xanthophylls are oxygenated. These pigments are orange or yellow in color.
- Autumn color is due to a change in the pigment composition of the leaf. For more details, check out my essay, "Behind the Green Curtain."
3. Electron Transport Complexes.
There are three major complexes (groups of proteins, pigments and electron carriers) in the chloroplast membranes (thylakoids). These complexes are physically separate from one another and can be isolated from the chloroplast by biochemical techniques (electrophoresis and ultra centrifugation). These complexes are (don't memorize the individual components - simply appreciate the diversity and complexity):(a) Photosystem II (PSII) Complex
- six integral proteins - coded by the chloroplast genome
- three peripheral proteins - coded by nuclear genome; they bind Ca2+ and Cl-
- 4 MN2+
- LHCII - Light harvesting pigment complex associated with PSII. It is comprised of: (1) about 250 chlorophyll a & b, in approximately equal amounts; (2) xanthophyll; (3) proteins - each pigment is associated with protein. The protein is coded by the nuclear genome
- P680 reaction center � a unique chlorophyll a, maximum red light absorption at 680nm; it may actually be two chlorophyll a molecules; this is the chlorophyll that "looses" electrons
(b) Cytochrome b/f Complex
- cytochrome b
- cytochrome f
- other proteins including a non-heme iron-sulfur protein (2Fe-2 S)
(c) Photosystem I (PSI) Complex
- 11 polypeptides
- 50-100 chl a
- electron carriers
- LHCI - contains about 100 chlorophylls; 4:1 ratio of chl a: chl b.; the protein is encoded by nuclear genome
- P700 reaction center � unique chlorophyll a that absorbs light in the red region at 700 nm
4. ATP synthase/Coupling Factor Complex
This is a group of nine polypeptides (some nuclear, some chloroplastic)that is responsible for making ATP. It looks like a "lollipop" inserted into the thylakoid. The stalk of the lollipop (CF0) is embedded in the thylakoid while the head (CF1 ) is in the stroma. This complex is essentially the same as the one in the mitochondrion.
IV. From photons to electrons
A. Nature of light
B. Which photons are important in
photosynthesis?
Run an action spectrum (graph of a physiological
process vs. wavelength).
****refer to action spectrum of photosynthesis****
Conclusion: radiations between 400-700 nm are photosynthetically active (termed PAR). Specifically, red (600�s) and blue (400�s) light is particularly important.
C. Photons must be absorbed to be used in a
photochemical reaction.
So, which molecules absorb the red and blue
light? Run an absorption spectrum of potential pigment candidates (plot
of light absorption vs. wavelength) and compare it to the action spectrum.
****refer to absorption spectrum of photosynthetic pigments.****
Chlorophyll a & b absorb light in red and blue regions of the visible spectrum. Note that their absorption spectrum matches the action spectrum of photosynthesis perfectly and hence, strongly implicates (though doesn�t prove) them in the process. (Subsequent work has shown the chlorophylls to be the major photosynthetic pigments).
D. Duh!
In reality it wasn't necessary to prepare action and
absorption spectra to learn that red and blue light was important for
photosynthesis. Since leaves are green, it means that they don't absorb
the green wavelengths of light in the visible spectrum but absorb the remainder
(blue and red). Thus, these are the ones available for photosynthesis.
As an example, if you look through a pair of red sunglasses the world
looks rosy. This is because the pigment in the lens absorbs all
wavelengths of light except red which can then be transmitted thru the lens to
your eye.
E. Quantity vs. Quality
F. What happens when chlorophyll absorbs light?
The chlorophyll molecule becomes excited (this takes only 10-15
sec = femptosec) and an electron moves to an outer energy level. CHL (ground
state)
→
CHL* (excited state)
Blue light excites an electron to a higher energy level than red light. Imagine the "bell ringer at a carnival." Electrons don�t stay excited long (10-9 sec) - they can:
G. Why excite electrons?
The ultimate purpose of exciting electrons from chlorophyll
is to provide the energy needed to transfer electrons from water to NADP+.
This is necessary because water has a lower energy state than NADP+ -
thus, the only way get electrons from water to NADP+ is to first excite them to
a high energy state so they can flow downhill to NADP+.
IV. The Z-Scheme (Or, the
Light-Dependent Reactions; Or, Non-cyclic photophosphorylation)
A. Overview.
During the
light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis, electrons are transferred from
water to NADP+. This reaction is depicted as
follows:
H2O
→
NADP+
In the thylakoid, three of the complexes mentioned above (III.B.3&4) are responsible for transferring the electrons from water to NADP+. These are Photosystem II (PSII), the cytochrome b/f complex (cyt b/f), and Photosystem I (PSI). After electrons are removed from water, they are sequentially shuttled from PSII to the cyto b/f complex to PSI and then finally to NADP+. Thus:
H2O → PSII → Cytb/f → PSI → NADP+
Since the three complexes are physically separated from one another in the thylakoid membrane, there must be a means to transfer electrons between the complexes. A mobile form of plastoquinone (PQ) transfers electrons from PSII to cyt b/f. A copper-containing protein, plastocyanin (PC), transfers electrons from the cytochrome b-f complex to PSI. Thus, the reaction sequence is modified as follows:
H2O → PSII → PQ → Cytb/f → PC → PSI → NADP+
The transfer of electrons from PSI to NADP+ requires a soluble carrier found in the stroma, ferredoxin (Fd). Thus our revised equation:
H2O → PSII →PQ → Cytb/f → PC → PSI → Fd → NADP+
The transfer of electrons from water to PSII involves an "oxygen evolving complex" (OEC) which is a part of PSII and rich in chloride and manganese ions. Thus,
H2O → OEC → PSII → PQ → Cytb/f → PC → PSI → Fd → NADP+
B. Origin of the name, Z Scheme
Derived from the arrangement of components with regard to
energy potential. But, why don�t we call it the N-scheme?
VI. Photophosphorylation
Evidence: lots!
VII. The final frontier - Calvin-Benson Cycle or Photosynthetic Carbon
Reduction
A. General:
B. Carbon dioxide fixation - carbon dioxide is fixed (trapped, bound) to form an organic compound (phosphoglyceric acid, PGA)
C. Reduction - step in which the "temporary" chemical (ATP) and reducing (NADPH) energy that were generated in the light-dependent reactions are used to reduce the PGA from an acid to a carbonyl (glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate; abbreviated G3P or GAP)
D. Rearrangement - complex series of reactions that result in the net removal of a C3 carbohydrate from the cycle and the production of the precursor to the starting material:
D. Charging - the original starting material (RuBP) is produced using the chemical potential (ATP) generated during the light-dependent reactions.
E. Summary: the fixation of 1 carbon dioxide requires: 3 ATP and 2 NADPH.
VIII. C3 Plants
Plants that exhibit the type of photosynthetic carbon
reduction that we described above are termed C3 plants. In other words, the
first product of carbon dioxide fixation is a 3-carbon compound (PGA). Thus,
when radioactively labeled carbon dioxide is fed to a plant, the first place
that it shows up is PGA.
(the remainder of the notes are not covered
on the exam)
IX. Photorespiration - Light stimulated production of carbon dioxide in the presence of oxygen
A. The problem - Rubisco.
Unlike most enzymes, rubisco is not substrate specific - it
also has an oxygenase function. In addition to its normal substrate (carbon
dioxide) rubisco also binds oxygen to RuBP. Although rubisco has a higher
affinity for binding carbon dioxide (Km = 9
B. The reaction catalyzed by ribulose
bisphosphate carboxylase/ oxygenase.
When rubisco binds oxygen to RuBP, the RuBP is essentially
split in half to a 3 carbon piece and a 2 carbon fragment according to the
following reaction: RuBP + oxygen
→ PGA (C3) + phosphoglycolate (C2)
Compare this to the normal reaction: RuBP + oxygen → 2 PGA (C3)
Thus, rubisco has oxygenase activity as well as a carboxylase.
C. What determines which process will occur?
Oxygenase activity occurs during periods of active
photosynthesis when:
The ratio of [carbon dioxide]/[oxygen] ultimately determines the product of the rubisco reaction.
X. Photosynthetic carbon oxidation (PCO),
or, Glycolate Cycle.
The purpose of this pathway is to metabolize and reclaim the
carbon in phosphoglycolate
A. Overview of the major steps:
B. Why do plant photorespire?
From a Darwinian perspective, we�d expect that this process
would have been selected against. However, the fact that so many plants do it,
suggests that it may have an unappreciated function. Possibilities include: (a)
salvage the carbon lost during rubisco oxygenase action; (b) mechanism to help
prevent destruction by excess light.
XI. C4 Photosynthesis, or, How maize avoids
photorespiration
Plants that avoid photorespiration have a unique modification
of photosynthesis. They are called C4 plants because the first product of carbon
dioxide fixation is a 4-carbon compound, not PGA as it is in C3 plants.
Examples: There are many plants that have this specialized modification. Found in many different and unrelated groups of plants which indicates that it apparently evolved independently several times. Even within a genus, some members can be C4 others C3.
C4 photosynthesis is common in grasses like maize, sorghum, crabgrass. But, not all grasses are C4; for example, Kentucky blue grass (Poa pratensis; common lawn grass) is C3.
A. How do C4 plants avoid photorespiration?
The answer is ingenious - C4 plants separate the site of oxygen
production (PSII) from rubisco (Calvin cycle). But how? PSII and rubisco are
placed in different:
B. Carbon Shuttle - Since C4 plants have separated the Calvin cycle PSII, there must be a mechanism to get carbon dioxide into the BSC since:
In order to solve this problem, plants required a mechanism to:
C. General scheme - on overhead, covered in class
D. Advantages of C4 metabolism.
Plants that exhibit this type of photosynthesis are characteristic of hot,
tropical environments that have a high light fluence. The advantage of C4 in
these circumstances is that C4 metabolism:
XII. Crassulacean Acid Metabolism -
CAM plants
A. Origin of the name.
Crassulacean refers to the Stonecrop family (Crassulaceae)
and related succulents in which this process is common. To date, plants in more
than 18 different families including Cactaceae (Cactus family) and Bromeliaceae
(Pineapple family) have been shown to carry out CAM metabolism. Acid is
derived from the observation that these plants accumulate large amounts of
organic acids in the dark.
Plants with CAM metabolism typically evolved in dry, hot, high light environments. This is largely a mechanism to conserve water. Recall the photosynthesis/transpiration compromise (paradox)? Plants in dry environments can�t afford to compromise - they loose too much water opening their stomates during the day. CAM plants solved this problem by opening up the stomates at night to obtain carbon dioxide. This strategy is just the reverse of "normal" plants. But, this presents another problem - ATP & NAPDH, which are products of the light dependent reactions, are not available when the carbon dioxide is fixed. The solution to this problem was to store the carbon dioxide during the night until ATP and NADPH were available the following day. Thus, there is a temporal separation of initial carbon fixation via PEPcase and the Calvin cycle. (C4 plants have a spatial separation).
B. PEPcase.
This is the initial enzyme that fixes carbon dioxide. The
product is ultimately malate, an organic acid, which accumulates in the vacuole during the night
(hence the "acid" term).
C. Sequence of events.
Night
→
stomates open
→
nocturnal transpiration (lower than diurnal) and carbon fixation by PEPcase
→
OAA produced
→
reduced with NADPH to malate
→
shuttled into vacuole
→
acid content of vacuole increases
→
starch depleted to provide PEP for carboxylation
→
day
→
stomates close
→
transpiration decreased
→
acid content decreases
→
malate decarboxylated to provide carbon dioxide for Calvin cycle
→
starch content increases
XIII. Comparison of C3, C4 and CAM photosynthesis
C3 | C4 | CAM | |
Leaf anatomy | no distinct bundle sheath | Kranz anatomy | Usually no palisade cells, large vacuoles |
Initial carboxylating enzyme | rubisco | PEPcase | PEPcase |
chloroplasts | one type | dimorphic | one type |
transpiration ratio (H2O/dry wt) | 450-950 | 250-350 | 18-125 |
carbon dioxide compensation point | 30-70 | 0-10 | 0-5 (in dark) |
photosynthesis inhibited by oxygen? | Yes | No | Yes |
photorespiration detectable? | yes | only in bundle sheath | late afternoon |
optimum temperature for photosynthesis | 15-25 | 30-47 | 35 |
dry matter production (tons ha-1 yr-1) | 22 | 39 | low, variable |
Last updated: July 14, 2009 � Copyright by SG Saupe