Section 5 - Chapter 11: Photosynthesis Flashcards
Where does the Light dependent reaction occur in?
- On the thylakoid membrane in chloroplast
Where does the light independent reaction occur in?
- Stroma in the chloroplast
What is photoionisation
- Chlorophyll absorbs light energy which excites electrons to a higher energy level, releasing them from chlorophyll
How is ATP produced in the light dependent reaction?
- Chlorophyll absorbs light energy which excites electrons to a higher energy level
- Electrons pass down electron transfer chain from photosystem 2 to photosystem 1 via redox reactions, losing energy
- The energy is used to actively transported protons from stroma into the thylakoid
- This creates a proton gradient across thylakoid membrane
- Protons move by facilitated diffusion down the electrochemical gradient into the stroma via ATP synthase
- Energy converts ADP + Pi to form ATP
How is reduced NADP formed in the light dependent reaction
- The photosystem 1 electrons are excited and transferred to NADP with a proton from photolysis to reduce NADP
What is photolysis?
- Splitting of water using light produces protons, electrons and oxygen
What are the products of the light dependent reaction and where do they go?
- ATP - light independent reaction
- Reduced NADP - light independent reaction
- Oxygen - Leaves cell as a by-product or used in respiration
What are the steps in the light independent reaction?
- CO2 reacts with RuBP catalysed by enzyme rubisco - 6C
- Produces 2 molecules of glycerate 3 -phosphate (GP) - 3C
- GP reduced to triose phosphate (TP) using energy from 1x ATP and 1x NADPH
- Some TP converted into useful organic substances - 5/6 used to regenerate RuBP uses 1 ATP
What is a limiting factor?
- A factor is limiting when it is made a more favourable value, the rate of photosynthesis increases unless it is limited by another factor
What are some limiting factors
- Temperature
- Light Intensity
- CO2 concentration
What happens when you increase temperature up to optimum - rubisco enzyme
- More kinetic energy
- More enzyme-substrate complexes
What happens if you increase temperature above optimum
- H bonds in the tertiary structure break - active site changes shape - enzyme denatured
- Fewer E-S complexes
What would happen if light intensity was dramatically reduced?
- Levels of ATP and reduced NADP would fall because
- light dependent reaction limited as less photo ionisation of chlorophyll and less photolysis
- So light dependent reaction would also stop
- GP can not be reduced to TP
- TP can not regenerate RuBP
What would happen if carbon dioxide concentration dramatically decreases?
- Limits light independent reaction
- Less CO2 to combine with RuBP to form GP
- Less GP reduced to TP
- Less TP and GP converted to organic substances e.g hexose and to regenerate RuBP
If limiting factors are minimal how will the rate of photosynthesis be increased?
- Faster production of glucose allowing faster respiration
- More ATP to provide energy for growth
- Higher yield so more profit