50
PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION Chap 5 Section 1

PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION. Chap 5 Section 1. ENERGY AND LIVING THINGS. Metabolism involves either using energy to build molecules or breaking down molecules in which energy is stored - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Chap 5

Section 1

Page 2: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

ENERGY AND LIVING THINGS• Metabolism involves

either using energy to build molecules or breaking down molecules in which energy is stored

• PHOTOSYNTHESIS - the process by

which light energy is converted to chemical energy of carbohydrates

• - sugar and starches

Page 3: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

• AUTOTROPHS – organisms that use energy from sunlight or from chemical bonds inorganic substances to make organic compounds (food)

Page 4: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

• Some prokaryotes use chemosynthesis to produce organic compounds

Page 5: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

• HETEROTROPHS – organisms that must get energy from food instead of directly from sunlight or inorganic substances

Page 6: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

• CELLULAR RESPIRATION – a metabolic process similar to burning fuel, but it converts food energy to ATP

• ATP provides cells with the energy needed to carry out the activities of life

Page 7: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

• Chemical energy stored in food is released gradually

• The product of one chemical reaction becomes a reactant in the next reaction

• Some of the energy is released as heat, but the remaining energy is stored as ATP – portable form of energy

• Adenosine triphosphate

Page 8: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Flow of Energy• Energy flows

from sunlight or inorganic substances to autotrophs, such as grasses, and then to heterotrophs, such as rabbits and foxes

Page 9: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Energy Storage in Organisms• Plants store

energy in the form of starch

• Animals store energy in the form of glycogen

Page 10: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

• Complete sentences

• P.96 section review 1-6

• P. 112 5a,6,12

Page 11: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

PHOTOSYNTHESISsection 2

Using the Energy in Sunlight

Page 12: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Requirements for Photosynthesis• Sunlight – nearly all

organisms on Earth depend on sun for energy

• Pigments – colored substance that absorb or reflect light

Page 13: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

• Energy-Storing Compounds – stored in the bonds of compounds

• Most important compound – one used by every living cell – ATP

• Adenosine triphosphate

• Inorganic substances – Water and Carbon Dioxide

Page 14: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

• White Light – perceived as ”colorless”

• Actually a mixture of different wavelengths of light

• Visible spectrum – wavelengths visible to our eyes

• Infrared and ultraviolet – not visible to our eyes

Page 15: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

• About 1 % of the energy in the sunlight is converted to chemical energy

• Three stages of Photosynthesis

• Stage 1: Energy is captured from sunlight.

• Stage 2: Conversion of Light Energy

• Stage 3: Storage of Energy

Page 16: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Stage 1Absorption of Light Energy

• First & second stages are sometimes called “light reactions”

• Light is a form of radiation – energy in the form of waves

• Pigments absorb only certain wavelengths and reflect all the others

• Chlorophyll absorbs mostly blue & red lights

Page 17: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

• Plants contain two types of chlorophyll, a and b, a being the most important

• Carotenoids – pigments that produce yellow & orange colors – absorb wavelengths of light different from chlorophyll

• Most of the pigments reflect the color green, making the leaves appear green

Page 18: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION
Page 19: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Production of Oxygen• Thylakoids-

located in the chloroplasts & contain the pigments necessary for photosynthesis

• Light energy is transferred to electrons causing them to be “excited”

Page 20: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

• Electrons jump to other molecules where they are used to power the second stage

• Replacement electrons come from water molecules

• Water molecules are split by enzymes, leaving H+ ions, and O atoms, forming Oxygen gas,

Page 21: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Stage Two: Conversion of Light Energy• Electron Transport

Chains (2)- series of molecules through which excited electrons are passed along a thylakoid membrane

• First, provides the energy needed to change ADP to ATP – needed by dark reaction

Page 22: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

• A second electron transport chain provides energy used to make NADPH- which is needed by the dark reaction

• NADPH – electron carrier that provides the high-energy electrons needed to make carbon-hydrogen bonds in the third stage

• Excited electrons combine with hydrogen ions & NADP+ to form NADPH

Page 23: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Animated Light Reaction

• http://www.uic.edu/classes/bios/bios100/lectures/light_reaction.htm

Page 24: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Photosynthesis Problem

http://www.uic.edu/classes/bios/bios100/lectures/photorespiration.htm

Page 25: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Dark Reaction(Light Independent Reaction)

• Dark reactions generally take place in sunlight; light does not play a role in the dark reactions

• The simple inorganic molecule carbon dioxide is used to make a complex organic molecule

• Melvin Calvin, American, worked out cycle

Page 26: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Stage Three: Storage of Energy• CARBON DIOXIDE

FIXATION – transfer of carbon dioxide to organic compounds

• Considered light-independent “dark reactions”

• Most common method is the Calvin cycle

• Calvin cycle- a series of enzyme-assisted chemical reactions that produces a 3-C sugar

Page 27: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

• The reactions are cyclic – they recycle the five-carbon compound needed to begin the cycle again

• The energy used in the Calvin cycle is supplied by ATP and NADPH made during the second stage of photosynthesis

Page 28: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION
Page 29: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Calvin Cycle Animated

http://www.uic.edu/classes/bios/bios100/lectures/calvin.htm

Page 30: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Light and Dark Reactions

• http://leavingbio.net/PHOTOSYNTHESIS.htm

Page 31: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Factors that Affect Photosynthesis• Light – photosynthesis

increases as light intensity increases until all the pigments are being used –limited by Calvin reaction which is the slowest step

• Carbon dioxide concentration – once a certain concentration is reached photosynthesis is limited

• Temperature- certain range is more efficient

Page 32: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

• Water – the availability of water and the amount of rainfall

• Nutrients – how much organic matter that soil contains

Page 33: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

• P. 103

• Section 2 review 1-6

• P. 112 1,2, 5c,8,9, 11

• Standardized Test Prep 1-3

Page 34: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Cellular Respiration• Food contains usable

energy in the form of protein, fat, & carbs (considered organic)

• Energy has to be transferred to ATP, which is done through cellular respiration

• AEROBIC respiration- metabolic processes that require oxygen, more efficient in making ATP

• ANAEROBIC-metabolic processes that do not require O2

Page 35: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Stages of Cellular Respiration• Stage I:

Breakdown of Glucose

• Stage II: Production of ATP

Page 36: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Stage I: Breakdown of Glucose• Glycolysis: takes place

in the cytoplasm- an enzyme-assisted anaerobic process that breaks down one 6-C molecule of glucose to 2 3-C pyruvic ions

• 4 Steps in the series on page 105 – you can copy them from the book

Page 37: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

• Glycolysis uses two ATP but produces four ATP

Page 38: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Stage 2: Production of ATP• Krebs Cycle enzyme-

assisted reactions named for Hans Krebs, 1937

• 5 steps on p. 106 & 107

• Much of the energy that was stored in glucose & pyruvate is now stored in NADH and FADH2

Page 39: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Krebs Cycle

• http://www.1lecture.com/Biochemistry/How%20the%20Krebs%20Cycle%20Works/index.html

Page 40: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION
Page 41: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Electron Transport Chain• The electron

transport chain pumps hydrogen ions, H+, out of the inner compartment.

• At the end of the chain, electrons & hydrogen ions combine with oxygen, forming water.

• ATP is produced as hydrogen ions diffuse into the inner compartment through a channel protein.

Page 42: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Respiration in the Absence of Oxygen• Electron transport chain

does not function if oxygen is not available as final electron acceptor.

• Electrons in NADH are transferred to pyruvate; enables the recycling of NAD+ which is needed to make ATP

• Fermentation- recycling of NAD+ using an organic hydrogen acceptor

Page 43: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Lactic Acid Fermentation• Pyruvate is converted to

lactate• Lactate is the ion of lactic

acid• Vigorous exercise –

muscles must operate without enough O2 –

• ATP produces only while glucose supply lasts

• Blood removes excess lactate, but if not quickly-can cause muscle soreness

Page 44: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Alcoholic Fermentation• Two step process

a. Pyruvate is converted to 2-C compound, releasing CO2

b. Electrons are transferred from NADH to the two-C compound, producing ethanol

Yeast, a fungus, uses alcoholic fermentation. Yeast is used in bread industry and alcoholic beverages

Ethanol (12%) kills yeast

Page 45: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Production of ATP• Total of ATP

produced from glucose depends on the absence or presence of O2

• 2 ATP molecules are made during the Krebs cycle

• 34 ATP are produced by the electron transport chain

Page 46: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION
Page 47: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Types of chemical reactions

• An exothermic reaction is a chemical reaction that releases energy in the form of heat..

Page 48: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

• An endothermic reaction is any chemical reaction that absorbs heat from its environment.

• These examples could be written as chemical reactions, but are more generally considered to be endothermic or heat-absorbing processes:

• melting ice cubes • melting solid salts • evaporating liquid water

Page 49: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

• converting frost to water vapor (melting, boiling, and evaporation in general are endothermic processes)

• splitting a gas molecule

• cooking an egg

Page 50: PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND CELLULAR RESPIRATION

Homework

• Page 110 - section review 1-6

• Page 112 – 3,4, 5b, 5d,7,10,13,14,19

• Test Part 2 over section 3 Monday 8th

• 10 true false 14 multiple choice and discussion