Carbon Fixation (dark reactions) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Carbon Fixation (dark reactions)

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Reduced thioredoxin can activate enzymes by reducing disulfides in regulatory domains. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Carbon Fixation (dark reactions)


1
  • Carbon Fixation (dark reactions)

2
Carbon Dioxide Fixation
  • A unique ability of plants, algae, etc.
  • Melvin Calvin at Berkeley in 1945 showed that
    Chlorella could take up 14CO2 and produce
    3-phosphoglycerate
  • What was actually happening was that CO2 was
    combining with a 5-C sugar to form a 6-C
    intermediate
  • This breaks down to two 3-P glycerates

3
Reductive Pentose Phosphate Cycle
6CO29ATP5H20 ? 9ADP8Pi6NADP(DHAP or G3P)
4
Ribulose-1,5-Bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase
(rubbisco)
  • Probably the world's most abundant protein
  • In leaves greater than 50 of the soluble protein
    is rubisco (stromal conc. 4 mM)
  • Rate Limiting step in RPP cycle
  • Rubisco is a slow enzyme (turnover number is 3
    rxn per second)
  • Composed of 8 large subunits (LSU) (56,000 dal)
    and 8 small subunits (SSU) (14,000 dal). Active
    sites assocaited with LSU.
  • LSU encoded by chloroplast genome. SSU encoded by
    nuclear genome.

5
Activation of Rubisco
  • Rubisco cycles between active and inactive form.
  • Active form requires a bound Mg2 ion, light and
    high pH.
  • A none substrate CO2 molecule participates in
    Mg2 binding to active site.
  • CO2 molecule binds reversibly to lysine residue
    forming carbamate adduct
  • Activation facilitated by the enzyme rubisco
    activase.
  • In the dark, carbamate adduct disassociates from
    active site. R 1,5-BP then binds tightly to
    active site and inhibits enzyme

6
Mg2 plays role in binding and activating R
1,6-BP to accept CO2
7
Rubisco Rxn Mechanisms
carboxylase
oxygenase
8
Reductive Pentose Phosphate Cycle
9
Reduction Stage
cytosol
  • Conversion of 3-phosphoglycerate to glucose is
    very similar to gluconeogenesis, but
    glyceraldehyde dehydrogenase uses NADPH not NADH.
  • Steps require consumption of ATP and NADPH.
  • 3-phosphoglycerate could also be exported to
    cytsol and be used in normal gluconeogenesis.
  • Hexoses can then be used for energy or starch
    synthesis

F 1,6-bisphophatase
aldolase
Glyceraldehyde dehydrogenase
Phosphoglycerate kinase
10
Reductive Pentose Phosphate Cycle
11
Regeneration Step
  • Need to regenerate ribulose 1,5-phosphate for
    subsequent rubisco reactions
  • One of the two 3-phosphoglyserates goes towards
    regeneration.
  • Need to generate 5 carbon sugar from 3 carbon and
    6 carbon sugars.
  • Most expensive part of RPP cycle.

12
Transketolases and Aldolases are used to make 5
carbon sugars
13
Formation of 5 Carbon Sugars
14
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15
F-6-P 2 G3P DHAP 3 ATP ? 3 R-1,5-BP 3 ADP
16
Regulation of RPP Cycle
  • Rubisco activity is regulated by pH Mg2
  • Other enzymes regulated by redox state of
    chloroplast
  • All factors are influenced by light

17
Thioredoxin
  • 12 kD protein
  • Contains Cysteine residue that can cycle between
    reduced SH and oxidized S-S-.
  • Reduced thioredoxin can activate enzymes by
    reducing disulfides in regulatory domains.

18
  • thioreodxin ties light rxns to RPP cycle
    regulation
  • In light Thioredoxin is reduced.
  • Reduced thioredoxin activates RPP cycle enzymes.
  • dark Rxns dont really function well in the
    dark.

19
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20
Oxygenase Activity of Rubisco
  • CO2 and O2 compete for binding at active site.
  • Under normal conditions the rate of carboxylation
    is 3 to 4 times the rate of oxygenation.
  • Both require activation by carbamate adduct
    (therefore no oxygenation w/o CO2)
  • Oxygenase activity produces 3-phosphoglycerate
    (normal C3 product) and 2-phosphoglycolate (C2
    product)

21
Photorespiration (recycling of
2-phosphoglycolate)
  • 4 of five carbons from R 1,5-BP salvaged.
  • Loose one carbon as CO2
  • Because O2 consumed and CO2 released the process
    is called photorespiration
  • Wasteful process, loose carbon as CO2 w/o
    producing ATP or NADH
  • Biochemist have been trying to engineer better
    rubisco (no luck)

22
Mechanisms to Avoid Photorespiration
  • C4 Photosynthesis Spatial separation of carbon
    fixation and carbon utilization
  • CAM (Crassulacean Acid Metabolism) Photosynthesis
    temporal separation of carbon fixation and
    carbon utilization

23
C4 Photosynthesis
  • C4 cycle is way to pump CO2 into bundle sheath
    cells making concentration 20 fold higher than in
    mesophyll cells.
  • Important in plants from hot climates.
  • Under elevated temperature rubisco favors
    oxygenase function causing plants to undergoe
    photorespiration.
  • By fixing CO2 in Ms Cells with PEP carboxylase
    and transferring it to the Bs Cells as a 4 carbon
    sugar can concentrate CO2 and prevent
    photorepsiration.

24
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25
CAM Photosynthesis
  • Found in succulent plants (Crassulacea).
  • Drought tolerant plants.
  • Gas exchange occurs by opening pores called stoma
  • What to import CO2 without loosing water through
    stoma.
  • CAM plants open stoma at night to fix CO2,
  • They then store it until daytime when it is
    release it to rubisco

stoma
26
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