Photosynthesis, Transpiration & Cellular Respiration Flashcards

Honors Biology: Photosynthesis, Transpiration & Cellular Respiration Flashcards

Honors Biology: Photosynthesis, Transpiration & Cellular Respiration

Nutrition & Energy Basics

Heterotrophic Nutrition

Definition: Organisms obtain energy by consuming organic molecules (food) produced by other organisms.

Mechanism: Ingest and digest complex organic compounds (e.g., glucose, proteins) into smaller molecules that can be absorbed and used in cellular respiration.

Examples: Animals, fungi, most bacteria.

Connection: Relies on autotrophs as the base of the food chain.

Autotrophic Nutrition

Definition: Organisms produce their own organic molecules (glucose) from inorganic sources using energy from light or chemicals.

Mechanism: Use photosynthesis (light energy) or chemosynthesis (chemical energy) to convert CO₂ and H₂O into glucose.

Examples: Green plants, algae, some bacteria.

Connection: Primary producers in ecosystems; foundation of all food webs.

Why can’t glucose be used as a direct energy source?

Reason: Releasing all of glucose’s energy at once would be explosive and wasteful (mostly lost as heat and light).

Mechanism: Cellular respiration breaks glucose down in small, controlled steps using enzymes to capture energy in ATP.

Connection: ATP is the universal energy currency; glucose is a storage molecule (stores ~90x more chemical energy than one ATP).

ATP (Adenosine Triphosphate)

Structure: Adenine + ribose + three phosphate groups.

Function: High-energy bonds between phosphate groups store and release energy when broken (ATP → ADP + Pᵢ + energy).

Mechanism: Energy from food (glucose) is transferred to ATP during cellular respiration; ATP powers nearly all cellular work.

Connection: Cells convert glucose to ATP to use energy in small, usable packets.

Photosynthesis

Photosynthesis

Purpose: Convert light energy into chemical energy stored in glucose.

Equation: 6CO₂ + 6H₂O + light energy → C₆H₁₂O₆ + 6O₂

Who: Autotrophs (plants, algae, some bacteria).

When: Only in the presence of light.

Location: Chloroplasts (specifically thylakoids and stroma).

Connection: Produces glucose (food) and oxygen (waste); reverse of cellular respiration.

Chlorophyll

Definition: Green pigment in chloroplasts that absorbs light energy (mainly red and blue wavelengths).

Mechanism: Excites electrons when hit by photons, initiating the light-dependent reactions.

Location: Embedded in thylakoid membranes (in photosystems).

Connection: Reflects green light (why plants appear green); critical for capturing light energy.

Chloroplast Structure

Stroma: Fluid-filled space; site of light-independent reactions (Calvin cycle).

Thylakoids: Flattened membrane sacs; contain chlorophyll; site of light-dependent reactions.

Granum (Grana): Stacks of thylakoids; increase surface area for light absorption.

Connection: Double membrane isolates reactions; thylakoid lumen builds H⁺ gradient for ATP synthesis.

Best Wavelengths for Photosynthesis

Answer: Blue (400–500 nm) and Red (600–700 nm).

Reason: Chlorophyll a and b absorb most strongly in these ranges; peak absorption at ~430 nm and ~660 nm.

Connection: Action spectrum matches absorption spectrum of chlorophyll.

Worst Wavelengths for Photosynthesis

Answer: Green (500–600 nm).

Reason: Chlorophyll reflects green light; very little is absorbed.

Connection: Explains why plants appear green; accessory pigments (carotenoids) absorb some green/orange.

Stages of Photosynthesis

Light-Dependent Reactions

Where: Thylakoid membranes.

Why: Capture light energy and convert it to chemical energy (ATP and NADPH).

When: Requires light.

Inputs: Light, H₂O, NADP⁺, ADP + Pᵢ.

Outputs: O₂ (waste), ATP, NADPH.

Mechanism: Photosystems II → I → electron transport chain → chemiosmosis; water split to replace electrons.

Light-Independent Reactions (Calvin Cycle)

Where: Stroma.

Why: Use ATP and NADPH to fix CO₂ into glucose (carbon fixation).

When: Can occur in light or dark (if ATP/NADPH available).

Inputs: CO₂, ATP, NADPH, RuBP.

Outputs: Glucose (G3P), ADP, NADP⁺, Pi.

Mechanism: 3 phases: Carbon fixation → Reduction → Regeneration of RuBP.

Carbon Fixation

Definition: Incorporation of inorganic CO₂ into organic molecules (e.g., glucose).

Mechanism: Enzyme Rubisco attaches CO₂ to RuBP → unstable 6-carbon compound → splits into two 3-PGA.

Connection: First step of Calvin cycle; builds carbon skeletons for sugars; stores energy in C–C bonds.

Plant Metabolism & Leaf Anatomy

What do plants do with glucose after photosynthesis?

1. Cellular Respiration: Broken down in mitochondria to produce ATP.

2. Polymer Synthesis: Dehydration synthesis to form starch, cellulose, etc.

3. Building Blocks: Rearranged into lipids, amino acids, proteins, nucleic acids.

Extra Elements: N and P absorbed from soil for proteins and DNA.

Connection: Glucose is the central molecule in plant metabolism.

Leaf Structures (Optimized for Photosynthesis)

Cuticle: Waxy layer; prevents water loss, allows light penetration.

Palisade Mesophyll: Columnar cells; high chloroplast density; maximizes light absorption.

Spongy Mesophyll: Air spaces; gas diffusion (CO₂ in, O₂ out); supports transpiration.

Vein (Xylem & Phloem): Transports water/minerals up, sugars down; structural support.

Stomata: Pores for gas exchange and transpiration.

Guard Cells: Regulate stomatal opening via turgor pressure (K⁺ pump).

Transpiration & Stomatal Regulation

Transpiration

Definition: Evaporation of water from plant leaves (mainly through stomata).

Purpose: Cools plant; drives transpirational pull; delivers minerals.

Mechanism: Water evaporates → creates negative pressure → pulls water up xylem via cohesion-tension.

Connection: Links photosynthesis, water uptake, and nutrient transport.

Transpirational Pull

Definition: Upward movement of water through xylem driven by evaporation at leaves.

Mechanism: Water molecules stick together (cohesion) and to xylem walls (adhesion); evaporation creates tension pulling water column up.

Connection: Allows water transport from roots to leaves against gravity; no energy required from plant.

Guard Cell Regulation of Stomata

Open Stomata: When guard cells take in K⁺ → water follows → turgid → stomata open.

When: Daytime, high light, low CO₂, adequate water.

Why: Allows CO₂ entry for photosynthesis.

Closed Stomata: K⁺ pumped out → water leaves → flaccid → stomata close.

When: Night, water stress, high temperature/humidity.

Why: Prevents water loss.

Connection: Feedback mechanism balances CO₂ uptake and water conservation.

Factors Affecting Transpiration Rate

Light: Opens stomata → increases evaporation.

Temperature: Higher temp → faster evaporation and diffusion.

Wind: Removes humid air → increases concentration gradient.

Humidity: High humidity → slows diffusion out of leaf.

Connection: All affect the rate of water vapor loss and thus transpirational pull.

Cellular Respiration

Aerobic Cellular Respiration

Purpose: Extract maximum energy from glucose using oxygen.

Equation: C₆H₁₂O₆ + 6O₂ → 6CO₂ + 6H₂O + 36 ATP (+ heat)

Who: Most eukaryotes and some prokaryotes.

When: Continuously, when O₂ is available.

Location: Cytoplasm (glycolysis) → Mitochondria (Krebs + ETC).

Connection: Reverse of photosynthesis; releases energy stored in food.

Glycolysis

Where: Cytoplasm.

Why: Split glucose into two pyruvate; generate small ATP and NADH.

Inputs: Glucose, 2 ATP, 2 NAD⁺.

Outputs: 2 Pyruvate, 4 ATP (net 2), 2 NADH.

Mechanism: 10 enzyme-catalyzed steps; anaerobic; universal in all life.

Krebs Cycle (Citric Acid Cycle)

Where: Mitochondrial matrix.

Why: Oxidize pyruvate → produce CO₂, NADH, FADH₂, and 2 ATP.

Inputs: 2 Pyruvate → 2 Acetyl-CoA → enters cycle.

Outputs (per glucose): 4 CO₂, 6 NADH, 2 FADH₂, 2 ATP.

Mechanism: Turns twice per glucose; generates electron carriers for ETC.

Electron Transport Chain (ETC)

Where: Inner mitochondrial membrane.

Why: Use high-energy electrons from NADH/FADH₂ to pump H⁺ and create gradient for ATP synthesis.

Mechanism: Electrons passed through protein complexes → O₂ accepts electrons → H₂O formed.

Outputs: ~32 ATP via chemiosmosis; H₂O.

Connection: Oxygen is final electron acceptor; without it, ETC stops.

Why is oxygen essential in aerobic respiration?

Role: Final electron acceptor in the ETC.

Mechanism: Accepts electrons from ETC → combines with H⁺ → forms H₂O.

Without O₂: NADH/FADH₂ cannot unload electrons → Krebs and ETC halt → only 2 ATP from glycolysis.

Connection: Explains why we breathe and why anaerobic respiration yields far less ATP.

Anaerobic Respiration & Fermentation

Anaerobic Respiration

Definition: Energy production without oxygen.

Location: Cytoplasm.

Yield: Only 2 ATP per glucose.

Types: Alcohol fermentation, lactic acid fermentation.

Connection: Allows survival in low-oxygen conditions; regenerates NAD⁺ for glycolysis.

Alcohol Fermentation

Equation: C₆H₁₂O₆ → 2CO₂ + 2 ethanol + 2 ATP

Who: Yeast, some bacteria.

Mechanism: Pyruvate → acetaldehyde → ethanol; regenerates NAD⁺.

Connection: Used in bread (CO₂ rises dough) and alcohol production.

Lactic Acid Fermentation

Equation: C₆H₁₂O₆ → 2 lactic acid + 2 ATP

Who: Human muscle cells (during intense exercise), some bacteria.

Mechanism: Pyruvate reduced to lactate; regenerates NAD⁺.

Connection: Causes muscle fatigue and soreness; lactate sent to liver for recycling.

Electron Carriers

Electron Carriers

Function: Transport high-energy electrons between reactions.

NADP⁺/NADPH: Used in photosynthesis (light reactions); accepts electrons from PS I.

NAD⁺/NADH & FAD/FADH₂: Used in cellular respiration (Krebs & ETC).

Mechanism: Accept electrons (reduced) → donate to next step (oxidized).

Connection: Shuttle energy without losing it as heat.

Photosynthesis vs. Cellular Respiration

Photosynthesis vs. Aerobic Cellular Respiration

Energy Source: Light (PS) vs. Glucose (CR).

Equation: Opposite reactions.

Location: Chloroplasts vs. Mitochondria.

Organisms: Autotrophs vs. All organisms.

Timing: Light only vs. Continuous.

Energy Form: Light → Chemical (glucose) vs. Chemical (glucose) → ATP.

Connection: Interdependent; O₂ and CO₂ cycle between processes.