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Photosynthesis: Calvin Cycle Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved. Molecular Biochemistry II

Photosynthesis: Calvin Cycle Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved. Molecular Biochemistry II

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Page 1: Photosynthesis: Calvin Cycle Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved. Molecular Biochemistry II

Photosynthesis: Calvin Cycle

Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved.

Molecular Biochemistry II

Page 2: Photosynthesis: Calvin Cycle Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved. Molecular Biochemistry II

Light reactions: Energy of light is conserved as “high energy” phosphoanhydride bonds of ATP reducing power of NADPH.

Proteins & pigments responsible for the light reactions are in thylakoid (grana disc) membranes.

Light reaction pathways will be not be presented here.

grana disks(thylakoids)

stromacompartment

2 outermembranes

Chloroplast

Photosynthesis takes place in chloroplasts.

It includes light reactions and reactions that are not directly energized by light.

Page 3: Photosynthesis: Calvin Cycle Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved. Molecular Biochemistry II

The free energy of cleavage of ~P bonds of ATP, and reducing power of NADPH, are used to fix and reduce CO2 to form carbohydrate.

Enzymes & intermediates of the Calvin Cycle are located in the chloroplast stroma, a compartment somewhat analogous to the mitochondrial matrix.

grana disks(thylakoids)

stromacompartment

2 outermembranes

Chloroplast

Calvin Cycle, earlier designated the photosynthetic "dark reactions," is now called the carbon reactions pathway:

Page 4: Photosynthesis: Calvin Cycle Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved. Molecular Biochemistry II

Ribulose Bisphosphate Carboxylase (RuBP Carboxylase), catalyzes CO2 fixation:

ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate + CO2 2 3-phosphoglycerate

Because it can alternatively catalyze an oxygenase reaction, the enzyme is also called RuBP Carboxylase/Oxygenase (RuBisCO). It is the most abundant enzyme on earth.

Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate(RuBP)

OH

H2C

CH

C

C

OHH

H2C OPO32-

OPO32-

O

3-Phosphoglycerate(3PG)

OH

H2C

CH

COO

OPO 32-

-

Page 5: Photosynthesis: Calvin Cycle Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved. Molecular Biochemistry II

RuBP Carboxylase - postulated mechanism:

Extraction of H+ from C3 of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate promotes formation of an enediolate intermediate.

Nucleophilic attack on CO2 leads to formation of a -

keto acid intermediate, that reacts with water and cleaves to form 2 molecules of 3-phosphoglycerate.

O H

H 2 C

CH

C

C

O HH

H 2 C O P O 32

O P O 32

O

O H

H 2 C

CH

C

C

O H

H 2 C O P O 32

O P O 32

O

H +O H

H 2 C

CH

C

C

O

H 2 C O P O 32

O P O 32

H O C O 2

C O 2

O H

H 2 C

CH

C

O P O 32

O O

H 2 O

1

5

4

3

2

r ib u lo se -1 ,5 - e n e d io la te -k e to 3 -p h o sp h o g ly c e ra te b isp h o sp h a te in te rm e d ia te in te rm e d ia te (2 )

Page 6: Photosynthesis: Calvin Cycle Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved. Molecular Biochemistry II

Transition state analogs of the postulated -keto acid intermediate bind tightly to RuBP Carboxylase and inhibit its activity.

Examples: 2-carboxyarabinitol-1,5-bisphosphate (CABP, above right) & carboxyarabinitol-1-phosphate (CA1P).

2-Carboxyarabinitol-1,5-bisphosphate (inhibitor)

OH

H2C

CH

C

C

OHH

H2C OPO 32

OPO 32

HO CO2

Proposed -keto acid intermediate

OH

H2C

CH

C

C

O

H2C OPO 32

OPO 32

HO CO 2

Page 7: Photosynthesis: Calvin Cycle Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved. Molecular Biochemistry II

8 large catalytic subunits (L, 477 residues, blue, cyan) 8 small subunits (S, 123 residues, shown in red).

Some bacteria contain only the large subunit, with the smallest functional unit being a homodimer, L2.

Roles of the small subunits have not been clearly defined. There is some evidence that interactions between large & small subunits may regulate catalysis.

RuBisCO PDB 1RCX

RuBisCO PDB 1RCX

RuBP Carboxylase in plants is a complex (L8S8) of:

Page 8: Photosynthesis: Calvin Cycle Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved. Molecular Biochemistry II

Large subunits within RuBisCO are arranged as antiparallel dimers, with the N-terminal domain of one monomer adjacent to the C-terminal domain of the other.

Each active site is at an interface between monomers within a dimer, explaining the minimal requirement for a dimeric structure.

The substrate binding site is at the mouth of an -barrel domain of the large subunit.

Most active site residues are polar, including some charged amino acids (e.g., Thr, Asn, Glu, Lys).

ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate

PDB 1RCX

2L & 2S subunits

of RuBisCO

Page 9: Photosynthesis: Calvin Cycle Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved. Molecular Biochemistry II

"Active" RuBP Carboxylase has a carbamate that binds an essential Mg++ at the active site.

The carbamate forms by reaction of HCO3 with the -

amino group of a lysine residue, in the presence of Mg++.

HCO3 that reacts to form carbamate is distinct from CO2 that

binds to RuBP Carboxylase as substrate.

Mg++ bridges between oxygen atoms of the carbamate & substrate CO2.

Carbamate Formation with RuBP Carboxylase Activation

Enz-Lys NH3+ H

N C

O

O

+ HCO3 + H2O + H+Enz-Lys

Page 10: Photosynthesis: Calvin Cycle Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved. Molecular Biochemistry II

Binding of either RuBP or a transition state analog to RuBP Carboxylase causes a conformational change to a "closed" conformation in which access of solvent water to the active site is blocked.

RuBP Carboxylase (RuBisCO) can spontaneously deactivate by decarbamylation.

In the absence of the carbamate group, RuBisCO tightly binds ribulose bisphosphate (RuBP) at the active site as a “dead end” complex, with the closed conformation, and is inactive in catalysis.

In order for the carbamate to reform, the enzyme must undergo transition to the open conformation.

Page 11: Photosynthesis: Calvin Cycle Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved. Molecular Biochemistry II

RuBP Carboxylase Activase is an ATP hydrolyzing (ATPase) enzyme that causes a conformational change in RuBP Carboxylase from a closed to an open state.

This allows release of tightly bound RuBP or other sugar phosphate from the active site, and carbamate formation.

Since photosynthetic light reactions produce ATP, the ATP dependence of RuBisCO activation provides a mechanism for light-dependent activation of the enzyme.

The activase is a member of the AAA family of ATPases, many of which have chaperone-like roles.

RuBP Carboxylase Activase is a large multimeric protein complex that may surround RuBisCO while inducing the conformational change to the open state.

Page 12: Photosynthesis: Calvin Cycle Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved. Molecular Biochemistry II

When O2 reacts with ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate, the products are 3-phosphoglycerate plus the 2-C compound 2-phosphoglycolate.

This reaction is the basis for the name RuBP Carboxylase/Oxygenase (RuBisCO).

OH

H 2 C

CH

COO

OPO 32

H 2 C

C

OPO 32

O O

3 - p h o s p h o - p h o s p h o g l y c o l a t e g l y c e r a t e

Photorespiration:

O2 can compete with CO2 for binding to RuBisCO, especially when [CO2] is low & [O2] is high.

Page 13: Photosynthesis: Calvin Cycle Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved. Molecular Biochemistry II

The complex pathway that partly salvages C from 2-phosphoglycolate, via conversion to 3-phosphoglycerate, involves enzymes of chloroplasts, peroxisomes & mitochondria.

This pathway recovers 3/4 of the C as 3-phosphoglycerate.The rest is released as CO2.

Photorespiration is a wasteful process, substantially reducing efficiency of CO2 fixation, even at normal ambient CO2.

OH

H 2 C

CH

COO

OPO 32

H 2 C

C

OPO 32

O O

3 - p h o s p h o - p h o s p h o g l y c o l a t e g l y c e r a t e

Photorespiration:

Diagram

Page 14: Photosynthesis: Calvin Cycle Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved. Molecular Biochemistry II

Most plants, designated C3, fix CO2 initially via RuBP Carboxylase, yielding the 3-C 3-phosphoglycerate.

Plants designated C4 have one cell type in which phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) is carboxylated via the enzyme PEP Carboxylase, to yield the 4-C oxaloacetate.

Oxaloacetate is converted to other 4-C intermediates that are transported to cells active in photosynthesis, where CO2 is released by decarboxylation.

O2C C CH2

OPO32

O2C C CH2

O

CO2+ HCO3

+ Pi

phosphoenolpyruvate oxaloacetate (PEP)

PEP Carboxylase

Page 15: Photosynthesis: Calvin Cycle Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved. Molecular Biochemistry II

C4 plants maintain a high ratio of CO2/O2 within

photosynthetic cells, thus minimizing photorespiration.

Research has been aimed at increasing expression of and/or inserting genes for C4 pathway enzymes, such as PEP Carboxylase, in C3 plants.

Page 16: Photosynthesis: Calvin Cycle Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved. Molecular Biochemistry II

Continuing with Calvin Cycle:

The normal RuBP Carboxylase product, 3-phospho-glycerate is converted to glyceraldehyde-3-P.

Phosphoglycerate Kinase catalyzes transfer of Pi from ATP to the carboxyl of 3-phosphoglycerate (RuBP Carboxylase product) to yield 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate.

OH

H 2 C

CH

COO

OPO 32

OH

H 2 C

CH

CO PO 3

2 O

OPO 32

OH

H 2 C

CH

CHO

OPO 32

A T P A D P N A D P H N A D P +

P i

1 , 3 - b i s p h o s p h o - g l y c e r a t e

3 - p h o s p h o - g l y c e r a t e

g l y c e r a l d e h y d e - 3 - p h o s p h a t e

P h o s p h o g l y c e r a t e K i n a s e

G l y c e r a l d e h y d e - 3 - p h o s p h a t e D e h y d r o g e n a s e

Page 17: Photosynthesis: Calvin Cycle Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved. Molecular Biochemistry II

Glyceraldehyde-3-P Dehydrogenase catalyzes reduction of the carboxyl of 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate to an aldehyde, with release of Pi, yielding glyceraldehyde-3-P.

This is like the Glycolysis enzyme running backward, but the chloroplast Glyceraldehyde-3-P Dehydrogenase uses NADPH as e donor, while the cytosolic Glycolysis enzyme uses NAD+ as e acceptor.

OH

H 2 C

CH

COO

OPO 32

OH

H 2 C

CH

CO PO 3

2 O

OPO 32

OH

H 2 C

CH

CHO

OPO 32

A T P A D P N A D P H N A D P +

P i

1 , 3 - b i s p h o s p h o - g l y c e r a t e

3 - p h o s p h o - g l y c e r a t e

g l y c e r a l d e h y d e - 3 - p h o s p h a t e

P h o s p h o g l y c e r a t e K i n a s e

G l y c e r a l d e h y d e - 3 - p h o s p h a t e D e h y d r o g e n a s e

Page 18: Photosynthesis: Calvin Cycle Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved. Molecular Biochemistry II

Continuing with Calvin Cycle:

A portion of the glyceraldehyde-3-P is converted back to ribulose-1,5-bisP, the substrate for RuBisCO, via reactions catalyzed by:

Triose Phosphate Isomerase, Aldolase, Fructose Bisphosphatase, Sedoheptulose Bisphosphatase, Transketolase, Epimerase, Ribose Phosphate Isomerase, & Phosphoribulokinase.

Many of these are similar to enzymes of Glycolysis, Gluconeogenesis or Pentose Phosphate Pathway, but are separate gene products found in the chloroplast stroma. (Enzymes of the other pathways listed are in the cytosol.)

The process is similar to Pentose Phosphate Pathway run backwards.

Page 19: Photosynthesis: Calvin Cycle Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved. Molecular Biochemistry II

Summary of Calvin cycle:

3 5-C ribulose-1,5-bisP (total of 15 C) are carboxylated (3 C added), cleaved, phosphorylated, reduced, & dephosphorylated, yielding 6 3-C glyceraldehyde-3-P (total of 18 C). Of these:

1 3-C glyceraldehyde-3-P exits as product.

5 3-C glyceraldehyde-3-P (15 C) are recycled back into 3 5-C ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate.

C3 + C3 C6

C3 + C6 C4 + C5

C3 + C4 C7

C3 + C7 C5 + C5

Overall 5 C3 3 C5

Page 20: Photosynthesis: Calvin Cycle Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved. Molecular Biochemistry II

Overall: 5 C3 3 C5

Enzymes:TI, Triosephosphate IsomeraseAL, AldolaseFB, Fructose-1,6- bisphosphataseSB, Sedoheptulose- BisphosphataseTK, TransketolaseEP, EpimeraseIS, Isomerase PK, Phospho- ribulokinase

TK

EP

PK

glyceraldehyde-3-P dihydroxyacetone-P

fructose-6-P

xyulose-5-P + erythrose-4-P

sedoheptulose-7-P

xylulose-5-P + ribose-5-P

(3) ribulose-5-P

(3) ribulose-1,5-bis-P

TI

TK

AL, FB

IS

AL, SB

Page 21: Photosynthesis: Calvin Cycle Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved. Molecular Biochemistry II

3 CO2 + 9 ATP + 6 NADPH

glyceraldehyde-3-P + 9 ADP + 8 Pi + 6 NADP+

Glyceraldehyde-3-P may be converted to other CHO:• metabolites (e.g., fructose-6-P, glucose-1-P)• energy stores (e.g., sucrose, starch)• cell wall constituents (e.g., cellulose).

Glyceraldehyde-3-P can also be utilized by plant cells as carbon source for synthesis of other compounds such as fatty acids & amino acids.

g l y c e r a l d e h y d e - 3 - p h o s p h a t e

OH

H 2 C

CH

CHO

OPO 32 OCO

c a r b o n d i o x i d e

Summary of Calvin Cycle

Page 22: Photosynthesis: Calvin Cycle Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved. Molecular Biochemistry II

There is evidence for multienzyme complexes of Calvin Cycle enzymes within the chloroplast stroma.

Positioning of many Calvin Cycle enzymes close to the enzymes that produce their substrates or utilize their reaction products may increase efficiency of the pathway.

grana disks(thylakoids)

stromacompartment

2 outermembranes

Chloroplast

Page 23: Photosynthesis: Calvin Cycle Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved. Molecular Biochemistry II

Regulation of Calvin Cycle

Regulation prevents the Calvin Cycle from being active in the dark, when it might function in a futile cycle with Glycolysis & Pentose Phosphate Pathway, wasting ATP & NADPH.

Light activates, or dark inhibits, the Calvin Cycle (previously called the “dark reaction”) in several ways.

Page 24: Photosynthesis: Calvin Cycle Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved. Molecular Biochemistry II

Light-activated e transfer is linked to pumping of H+ into thylakoid disks. pH in the stroma increases to about 8.

Alkaline pH activates stromal Calvin Cycle enzymes RuBP Carboxylase, Fructose-1,6-Bisphosphatase & Sedoheptulose Bisphosphatase.

The light-activated H+ shift is countered by Mg++ release from thylakoids to stroma. RuBP Carboxylase (in stroma) requires Mg++ binding to carbamate at the active site.

stroma (alkaline)

Chloroplast

H2O OH + H+

h

(acid inside thylakoid disks)

Regulation by Light.

Page 25: Photosynthesis: Calvin Cycle Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved. Molecular Biochemistry II

Some plants synthesize a transition-state inhibitor, carboxyarabinitol-1-phosphate (CA1P), in the dark.

RuBP Carboxylase Activase facilitates release of CA1P from RuBP Carboxylase, when it is activated under conditions of light by thioredoxin.

Page 26: Photosynthesis: Calvin Cycle Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved. Molecular Biochemistry II

disulfide

Thioredoxin f PDB 1FAA

Thioredoxin is a small protein with a disulfide that is reduced in chloroplasts via light-activated electron transfer.

Page 27: Photosynthesis: Calvin Cycle Copyright © 1999-2008 by Joyce J. Diwan. All rights reserved. Molecular Biochemistry II

During illumination, the thioredoxin disulfide is reduced to a dithiol by ferredoxin, a constituent of the photosynthetic light reaction pathway, via an enzyme Ferredoxin-Thioredoxin Reductase.

Reduced thioredoxin activates several Calvin Cycle enzymes, including Fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase, Sedoheptulose-1,7-bisphosphatase, and RuBP Carboxylase Activase, by reducing disulfides in those enzymes to thiols. 

thio

redo

xin

S S

thio

redo

xin

SH SH

|

ferredoxinRed ferredoxinOx

Ferredoxin- Thioredoxin Reductase