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Understanding the Calvin Cycle and C-4 Pathway

The Calvin Cycle occurs in the chloroplast stroma and involves the fixation of carbon dioxide into glucose. Carbon dioxide is captured by the 5-carbon molecule ribulose bisphosphate (RuBP) and 6 molecules enter the cycle to produce one glucose molecule. The first stable product, 3-carbon phosphoglycerate, has phosphates attached with ATP and NADPH energy to reform more RuBP, restarting the cycle. Some plants developed the C4 pathway where phosphoenolpyruvate captures carbon dioxide first before entering the Calvin Cycle. This separation of processes aids hot climate plants like corn and sugarcane.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
106 views2 pages

Understanding the Calvin Cycle and C-4 Pathway

The Calvin Cycle occurs in the chloroplast stroma and involves the fixation of carbon dioxide into glucose. Carbon dioxide is captured by the 5-carbon molecule ribulose bisphosphate (RuBP) and 6 molecules enter the cycle to produce one glucose molecule. The first stable product, 3-carbon phosphoglycerate, has phosphates attached with ATP and NADPH energy to reform more RuBP, restarting the cycle. Some plants developed the C4 pathway where phosphoenolpyruvate captures carbon dioxide first before entering the Calvin Cycle. This separation of processes aids hot climate plants like corn and sugarcane.

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potchi
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The Calvin Cycle occurs in the stroma of chloroplasts (where would it occur in a

prokaryote?). Carbon dioxide is captured by the chemical ribulose biphosphate (RuBP). RuBP


is a 5-C chemical. Six molecules of carbon dioxide enter the Calvin Cycle, eventually
producing one molecule of glucose.

The first stable product of the Calvin Cycle is phosphoglycerate (PGA), a 3-C
chemical. The energy from ATP and NADPH energy carriers generated by the
photosystems is used to attach phosphates to (phosphorylate) the PGA. Eventually
there are 12 molecules of glyceraldehyde phosphate (also known
as phosphoglyceraldehyde or PGAL, a 3-C), two of which are removed from the cycle
to make a glucose. The remaining PGAL molecules are converted by ATP energy to
reform 6 RuBP molecules, and thus start the cycle again. Remember the complexity
of life, each reaction in this process, as in Kreb's Cycle, is catalyzed by a different
reaction-specific enzyme.

C-4 Pathway | Back to Top


Some plants have developed a preliminary step to the Calvin Cycle (which is also
referred to as a C-3 pathway), this preamble step is known as C-4. While most C-
fixation begins with RuBP, C-4 begins with a new molecule, phosphoenolpyruvate
(PEP), a 3-C chemical that is converted into oxaloacetic acid (OAA, a 4-C chemical)
when carbon dioxide is combined with PEP. The OAA is converted to Malic Acid and
then transported from the mesophyll cell into the bundle-sheath cell, where OAA is
broken down into PEP plus carbon dioxide. The carbon dioxide then enters the Calvin
Cycle, with PEP returning to the mesophyll cell. The resulting sugars are now
adjacent to the leaf veins and can readily be transported throughout the plant.

C-4 photosynthsis involves the separation of carbon fixation and carbohydrate


systhesis in space and time. Image from Purves et al., Life: The Science of Biology,
4th Edition, by Sinauer Associates (www.sinauer.com) and WH Freeman
(www.whfreeman.com), used with permission.

The capture of carbon dioxide by PEP is mediated by the enzyme PEP carboxylase,
which has a stronger affinity for carbon dioxide than does RuBP carboxylase When
carbon dioxide levels decline below the threshold for RuBP carboxylase, RuBP is
catalyzed with oxygen instead of carbon dioxide. The product of that reaction forms
glycolic acid, a chemical that can be broken down by photorespiration, producing
neither NADH nor ATP, in effect dismantling the Calvin Cycle. C-4 plants, which
often grow close together, have had to adjust to decreased levels of carbon dioxide by
artificially raising the carbon dioxide concentration in certain cells to prevent
photorespiration. C-4 plants evolved in the tropics and are adapted to higher
temperatures than are the C-3 plants found at higher latitudes. Common C-4 plants
include crabgrass, corn, and sugar cane. Note that OAA and Malic Acid also have
functions in other processes, thus the chemicals would have been present in all plants,
leading scientists to hypothesize that C-4 mechanisms evolved several times
independently in response to a similar environmental condition, a type of evolution
known as convergent evolution.

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