Menu Top




Photosynthesis in Higher Plants



What Do We Know?

Photosynthesis is the process by which plants and some other organisms use sunlight to synthesise foods with the help of chlorophyll pigment. It is a vital process that sustains life on Earth by converting light energy into chemical energy in the form of organic compounds (sugars) and releasing oxygen.


From our basic understanding, we know a few things about photosynthesis:


The basic equation representing photosynthesis is often shown as:

$ 6CO_2 + 6H_2O \xrightarrow{\text{Light, Chlorophyll}} C_6H_{12}O_6 + 6O_2 $

This simplified equation shows that carbon dioxide and water are converted into glucose (a sugar) and oxygen, using light energy captured by chlorophyll.


While this equation represents the overall process, photosynthesis is a complex series of reactions that occur in different stages within the plant cell. The subsequent sections will delve into the details of this process, the components involved, and the mechanisms by which it takes place.



Early Experiments

The understanding of photosynthesis has evolved over centuries through a series of experiments. Early scientists conducted experiments to figure out what was needed for plants to produce food.


Joseph Priestley (1770)

Diagram illustrating Priestley's bell jar experiment with a candle, mouse, and mint plant

*(Image shows a bell jar experiment with a candle and mouse (air becomes 'bad'), and another bell jar with a mint plant restoring the air quality)*


Jan Ingenhousz (1779)


Julius von Sachs (1854)


T.W. Engelmann (1883)

Diagram illustrating Engelmann's experiment with Spirogyra, aerobic bacteria, and a prism

*(Image shows a setup with a prism splitting light, a slide with filamentous alga and bacteria, showing bacteria clustered in the blue and red light regions)*


Cornelius van Niel (1930s)


These early experiments laid the foundation for our understanding of the basic requirements and processes of photosynthesis.



Where Does Photosynthesis Take Place?

Photosynthesis takes place in the green parts of plants, specifically in the chloroplasts.


Chloroplasts: The Site of Photosynthesis

Diagram showing the ultrastructure of a chloroplast highlighting outer/inner membrane, stroma, grana (stacks of thylakoids), and stromal lamellae

*(Image shows a cross-section of a chloroplast illustrating its main components)*


Two Stages of Photosynthesis:

Photosynthesis is divided into two main stages:

  1. Light-dependent reactions (Light reactions): These reactions occur in the thylakoid membranes. They require light energy to produce ATP (chemical energy) and NADPH (reducing power). Water is split, releasing oxygen.
  2. Light-independent reactions (Dark reactions / Calvin cycle): These reactions occur in the stroma. They do not directly require light, but they depend on the ATP and NADPH produced during the light reactions to fix carbon dioxide ($CO_2$) and synthesise sugars.

The light reactions and the dark reactions are interconnected. The products of the light reactions (ATP and NADPH) are used to drive the dark reactions, and the products of the dark reactions (ADP and NADP$^+$) are recycled back to the light reactions.



How Many Types Of Pigments Are Involved In Photosynthesis?

Photosynthesis relies on pigments that absorb light energy. These pigments are primarily located in the thylakoid membranes of chloroplasts.


Photosynthetic Pigments

The main photosynthetic pigments in higher plants are:

  1. Chlorophylls: The primary photosynthetic pigments. They absorb light mainly in the blue and red regions of the spectrum and reflect green light (hence plants appear green).
    • Chlorophyll a: The main pigment, the primary reaction centre of photosynthesis. It absorbs light most strongly in the blue-violet and red regions.
    • Chlorophyll b: An accessory pigment. It absorbs light in regions slightly different from chlorophyll a and transfers the energy to chlorophyll a.
  2. Carotenoids: Accessory pigments (yellow, orange, or red pigments).
    • Carotenes: (e.g., $\beta$-carotene).
    • Xanthophylls: (e.g., lutein).

    Functions of carotenoids:

    • Absorb light in regions of the spectrum where chlorophylls do not absorb effectively (e.g., green-yellow region), thus broadening the range of light used for photosynthesis.
    • Protect chlorophyll from photo-oxidation (damage by excess light energy).

Other pigments like phycobilins are found in algae and cyanobacteria, but not in higher plants.


Absorption Spectra and Action Spectra

The action spectrum of photosynthesis closely matches the absorption spectrum of chlorophyll a, but it is slightly broader due to the contribution of accessory pigments (chlorophyll b and carotenoids) which absorb light and transfer the energy to chlorophyll a.

Graph showing absorption spectra of chlorophyll a, chlorophyll b, and carotenoids, and the action spectrum of photosynthesis

*(Image shows overlapping curves: absorption spectra of chlorophyll a, b, and carotenoids plotted against wavelength, and the action spectrum of photosynthesis plotted against wavelength, showing peaks in blue and red regions)*


Photosystems

The photosynthetic pigments are organised into two discrete photosystems (or pigment systems) located in the thylakoid membranes. Each photosystem consists of a reaction centre and associated light-harvesting complexes (antennae).

There are two photosystems:

The two photosystems work together to carry out the light-dependent reactions.



What Is Light Reaction?

The Light-dependent reactions (Light reactions) are the first stage of photosynthesis. They occur in the thylakoid membranes and directly utilise light energy to produce ATP and NADPH, and release oxygen as a byproduct.


Processes in Light Reactions:

  1. Light absorption: Photosynthetic pigments (chlorophylls, carotenoids) absorb light energy.
  2. Water splitting: Water molecules are split, releasing oxygen, protons ($H^+$), and electrons.
  3. Light energy conversion: Light energy is converted into chemical energy in the form of ATP and NADPH. This involves electron transport and proton gradients.

Electron Transport Chain

The synthesis of ATP and NADPH is coupled to the movement of electrons through a series of electron carriers located in the thylakoid membrane. This is called the Electron Transport Chain (ETC).

The electrons follow two main pathways:


Summary Products of Light Reaction:

These products (ATP and NADPH) are then used in the light-independent reactions (Calvin cycle) to fix carbon dioxide and synthesise sugars.



The Electron Transport

The electron transport chain in the thylakoid membrane is a series of redox reactions where electrons are transferred from one carrier molecule to the next, releasing energy at certain steps. This energy is used to produce ATP and NADPH.


Splitting Of Water

Water splitting (or photolysis of water) is an essential part of the non-cyclic electron transport chain. This process occurs on the inner side of the thylakoid membrane and is associated with PS II.

Reaction:

$ 2H_2O \rightarrow 4H^+ + O_2 + 4e^- $

Function of water splitting:

This reaction requires enzymes and is catalysed by a complex associated with PS II, including Manganese (Mn), Calcium (Ca), and Chlorine (Cl) ions.


Cyclic And Non-Cyclic Photo-Phosphorylation

Photophosphorylation is the synthesis of ATP from ADP and inorganic phosphate (Pi) using light energy. It occurs in chloroplasts. There are two types:

Non-cyclic Photophosphorylation (Z-scheme):

Diagram illustrating the Z-scheme (non-cyclic electron transport) in the thylakoid membrane

*(Image shows a diagram depicting the Z-scheme: PS II absorbing light, electron flow to primary acceptor, down through ETC to PS I (pumping protons), PS I absorbing light, electron flow to NADP+, reducing it to NADPH. Shows water splitting releasing O2 and electrons for PS II. Indicates ATP synthesis linked to proton gradient)*


Cyclic Photophosphorylation:

Diagram illustrating cyclic electron transport involving only PS I

*(Image shows a simplified cycle diagram: PS I absorbing light, electron flowing to primary acceptor, then cyclically back to PS I via an ETC (including cytochrome b6f), indicating proton pumping for ATP synthesis)*


Chemiosmotic Hypothesis

The Chemiosmotic Hypothesis, proposed by Peter Mitchell, explains how ATP is synthesised in chloroplasts (and mitochondria) using the energy of proton gradients.

Steps in Chemiosmotic ATP Synthesis in Chloroplasts:

1. Proton Gradient Formation: A proton gradient is established across the thylakoid membrane, with a higher concentration of protons ($H^+$) in the thylakoid lumen and a lower concentration in the stroma. This gradient is created by:

This creates both a proton concentration gradient and an electrical potential difference (lumen positive, stroma negative) across the thylakoid membrane.

2. Proton Flow through ATP Synthase: The thylakoid membrane contains an ATP synthase enzyme complex, which has two parts:

3. ATP Synthesis: The energy released by the movement of protons through the CF$_0$ channel causes a conformational change in the CF$_1$ part, which catalyses the synthesis of ATP from ADP and Pi on the stroma side.

$ ADP + Pi \xrightarrow{\text{ATP Synthase}} ATP $

Diagram illustrating the chemiosmotic hypothesis for ATP synthesis in a thylakoid membrane

*(Image shows a thylakoid membrane illustrating proton ($H^+$) accumulation in the lumen, electron transport chain components pumping protons, NADP+ reduction using stromal protons, and ATP synthase (CF0-CF1) allowing proton flow from lumen to stroma to generate ATP)*


Chemiosmosis is the mechanism by which light energy, through electron transport, is coupled to the synthesis of ATP. The ATP and NADPH produced during the light reactions are released into the stroma, where they are available for the next stage of photosynthesis.



Where Are The Atp And Nadph Used?

The ATP and NADPH produced during the light-dependent reactions are used to drive the synthesis of sugars from carbon dioxide. This process constitutes the Light-independent reactions, also known as the Calvin cycle or the C3 pathway.


These reactions occur in the stroma of the chloroplasts. They are 'light-independent' because they do not directly require light, but they are dependent on the energy (ATP) and reducing power (NADPH) generated by the light-dependent reactions.


The Primary Acceptor Of Co2

In the Calvin cycle, carbon dioxide ($CO_2$) is first incorporated into an organic molecule. The molecule that initially accepts $CO_2$ is crucial for this process.

Discovery of the Primary CO$_2$ Acceptor:

The enzyme responsible for this initial fixation of $CO_2$ to RuBP is RuBP carboxylase/oxygenase, commonly known as RuBisCO. RuBisCO is the most abundant enzyme in the world.

This reaction, where $CO_2$ is incorporated into RuBP, is called carboxylation.


The Calvin Cycle

The Calvin cycle is the metabolic pathway where $CO_2$ is fixed and reduced to form carbohydrates using ATP and NADPH. It has three main stages:

  1. Carboxylation: $CO_2$ is fixed by RuBisCO to RuBP, forming an unstable 6-carbon intermediate, which immediately breaks down into two molecules of the 3-carbon compound, 3-PGA.

    $ RuBP \:(5C) + CO_2 \xrightarrow{\text{RuBisCO}} \text{Unstable 6C intermediate} \rightarrow 2 \times \text{3-PGA} \:(3C) $

    This is the first stable product of the Calvin cycle, making it the C3 pathway.


  2. Reduction: The 3-PGA molecules are converted into 3-carbon sugars (Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate). This stage requires ATP and NADPH from the light reactions.
    • 3-PGA is phosphorylated by ATP to form 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate.
    • 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate is reduced by NADPH to form glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate (a triose phosphate).
    • For every molecule of $CO_2$ fixed, 2 molecules of 3-PGA are formed, requiring 2 ATP and 2 NADPH for reduction to triose phosphate.
    • Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate can be converted into glucose, sucrose, or starch.

  3. Regeneration: RuBP, the $CO_2$ acceptor molecule, is regenerated from the remaining triose phosphate molecules. This stage requires ATP.
    • For every one molecule of $CO_2$ fixed, only 1 molecule of triose phosphate can be exported from the cycle to form sugars. The remaining triose phosphate is used to regenerate RuBP.
    • To regenerate 1 molecule of RuBP, 5 molecules of triose phosphate are needed (as 5 triose phosphates contain $5 \times 3C = 15C$, equal to the carbon in 3 RuBP molecules).
    • This regeneration requires 1 ATP molecule per RuBP regenerated.
Diagram illustrating the Calvin Cycle (C3 pathway) with carboxylation, reduction, and regeneration stages

*(Image shows a cycle diagram illustrating the Calvin cycle: CO2 combining with RuBP (carboxylation), forming 3-PGA, reduction using ATP and NADPH to form triose phosphates, and regeneration of RuBP using ATP, showing carbon flow and ATP/NADPH usage)*


Inputs and Outputs of the Calvin Cycle:

To produce one molecule of glucose (a 6-carbon sugar), the Calvin cycle needs to fix 6 molecules of $CO_2$. This requires the cycle to turn 6 times.

For every 6 $CO_2$ molecules fixed (to produce 1 glucose):

The overall equation for the Calvin cycle using the products of light reaction:

$ 6CO_2 + 18 ATP + 12 NADPH + 12 H_2O \rightarrow C_6H_{12}O_6 + 18 ADP + 18 Pi + 12 NADP^+ + 6 H_2O $

Simplified net equation:

$ 6CO_2 + 18 ATP + 12 NADPH \rightarrow C_6H_{12}O_6 + 18 ADP + 18 Pi + 12 NADP^+ $


Example 1. How many ATP and NADPH molecules are required to produce 3 molecules of glucose through the Calvin cycle?

Answer:

To produce 1 molecule of glucose, the Calvin cycle requires 18 ATP and 12 NADPH molecules.

To produce 3 molecules of glucose, the requirement will be $3 \times$ the requirement for 1 glucose molecule.

ATP required = $3 \times 18 = 54$ ATP molecules.

NADPH required = $3 \times 12 = 36$ NADPH molecules.

So, 54 ATP and 36 NADPH molecules are required to produce 3 molecules of glucose.



The C4 Pathway

While the Calvin cycle (C3 pathway) is common to all photosynthetic plants, some plants, particularly those adapted to dry tropical regions, have evolved an alternative pathway for carbon dioxide fixation called the C4 pathway or Hatch-Slack pathway.


Significance of C4 Pathway:


Kranz Anatomy:

C4 plants exhibit a special type of leaf anatomy called Kranz anatomy (Kranz means 'wreath' in German). This anatomy is characterised by:

Diagram showing Kranz anatomy in a C4 leaf cross-section

*(Image shows a cross-section of a C4 leaf vein area, illustrating the vascular bundle surrounded by large bundle sheath cells (with chloroplasts) which are then surrounded by mesophyll cells)*


The C4 Pathway Steps:

The C4 pathway involves two types of photosynthetic cells: mesophyll cells and bundle sheath cells. $CO_2$ is fixed twice.

1. Initial $CO_2$ fixation in Mesophyll cells:

2. Decarboxylation in Bundle Sheath cells:

3. Regeneration of PEP in Mesophyll cells:

Diagram illustrating the C4 pathway involving mesophyll and bundle sheath cells

*(Image shows a diagram illustrating the C4 pathway across mesophyll and bundle sheath cells: CO2 entering mesophyll, fixation by PEPcase to OAA/malate, transport to bundle sheath, decarboxylation releasing CO2, CO2 entering Calvin cycle in bundle sheath, pyruvate returning to mesophyll, regeneration of PEP using ATP)*


Energy Requirement of C4 Pathway:

For every molecule of $CO_2$ fixed, the C4 pathway requires more ATP than the C3 pathway because of the extra step of PEP regeneration.

Total energy requirement for C4 pathway: (3 ATP + 2 NADPH) in bundle sheath C3 cycle + 2 ATP in mesophyll = 5 ATP and 2 NADPH per $CO_2$ fixed.

Although C4 plants require more ATP, their ability to concentrate $CO_2$ minimises photorespiration, which saves energy that would otherwise be lost in C3 plants, making them more efficient in certain environments.


Examples of C4 Plants:


Feature C3 Plants C4 Plants
Primary CO$_2$ acceptor RuBP (5C) PEP (3C)
Primary CO$_2$ fixing enzyme RuBisCO PEPcase
First stable product 3-PGA (3C) OAA (4C)
Site of Calvin cycle Mesophyll cells Bundle sheath cells
Leaf anatomy Typical (no Kranz) Kranz anatomy (Bundle sheath cells)
Photorespiration High (especially in high O$_2$, low CO$_2$) Negligible/Absent
Efficiency at high light intensity Lower (saturates at lower light) Higher (no saturation)
Efficiency at low CO$_2$ concentration Lower Higher (PEPcase has high affinity)
ATP and NADPH per CO$_2$ 3 ATP, 2 NADPH 5 ATP, 2 NADPH
Adaptation Temperate regions Dry tropical regions (high temp, light)
Examples Rice, Wheat, Potato Maize, Sugarcane, Sorghum


Photorespiration

Photorespiration is a wasteful process that occurs in C3 plants. It is a light-dependent process that consumes oxygen and releases carbon dioxide, without producing ATP or NADPH, and reducing the efficiency of photosynthesis.


Mechanism of Photorespiration:

The net result of photorespiration is the loss of fixed carbon as $CO_2$ and no energy production (ATP or NADPH). It effectively reduces the efficiency of photosynthesis.

Diagram illustrating the photorespiration pathway involving chloroplast, peroxisome, and mitochondrion

*(Image shows a diagram illustrating the flow of carbon compounds (RuBP, Phosphoglycolate, Glycolate, Glycine, Serine, 3-PGA) through chloroplast, peroxisome, and mitochondrion, showing O2 uptake and CO2 release)*


Factors Favouring Photorespiration:

These conditions often occur when stomata are partially closed during hot, dry weather to conserve water. This limits $CO_2$ uptake, while $O_2$ produced during photosynthesis builds up inside the leaf.


Why Photorespiration is Absent or Negligible in C4 Plants:



Factors Affecting Photosynthesis

The rate of photosynthesis is influenced by several factors, both internal and external. Understanding these factors is important for optimising plant growth and yield.


Law of Limiting Factors (Blackman's Law, 1905)

This law states that if a process is conditioned as to its rapidity by a number of separate factors, the rate of the process is limited by the pace of the slowest factor.

In photosynthesis, this means that at any given time, the rate of photosynthesis is limited by the factor that is in shortest supply, relative to the demand.

$ \text{Rate of Photosynthesis} \propto \text{Minimum of [Light], [CO}_2\text{], Temperature, Water, etc.} $


Light

Graph showing the effect of light intensity on the rate of photosynthesis

*(Image shows a graph with rate of photosynthesis on Y-axis and light intensity on X-axis, showing initial linear increase and then plateau)*


Carbon Dioxide Concentration

Graph comparing the effect of CO2 concentration on photosynthesis rate in C3 and C4 plants

*(Image shows a graph with rate of photosynthesis on Y-axis and CO2 concentration on X-axis, showing C4 plants saturating at lower CO2 and C3 plants saturating at higher CO2)*


Temperature


Water


Other internal factors affecting photosynthesis include the number, size, age, and orientation of leaves, mesophyll cells and chloroplasts, internal $CO_2$ concentration, and the amount of chlorophyll.