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Photosynthesis: Crash Course Biology #8

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    Photosynthesis! It is not some kind of abstract
    scientific thing. You would be dead without
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    plants and their magical- nay, SCIENTIFIC
    ability to convert sunlight, carbon dioxide
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    and water into glucose and pure, delicious
    oxygen.
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    This happens exclusively through photosynthesis,
    a process that was developed 450 million years
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    ago and actually rather sucks.
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    It's complicated, inefficient and confusing.
    But you are committed to having a better,
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    deeper understanding of our world! Or, more
    probably, you'd like to do well on your
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    test...so let's delve.
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    There are two sorts of reactions in Photosynthesis...light
    dependent reactions, and light independent
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    reactions, and you've probably already figured
    out the difference between those two, so that's
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    nice. The light independent reactions are
    called the "calvin cycle"
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    no...no...no...no...YES! THAT Calvin Cycle.
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    Photosynthesis is basically respiration in
    reverse, and we've already covered respiration,
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    so maybe you should just go watch that video
    backwards. Or you can keep watching this one.
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    Either way.
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    I've already talked about what photosynthesis
    needs in order to work: water, carbon dioxide
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    and sunlight.
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    So, how do they get those things?
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    First, water. Let's assume that we're
    talking about a vascular plant here, that's
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    the kind of plant that has pipe-like tissues
    that conduct water, minerals and other materials
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    to different parts of the plant.
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    These are like trees and grasses and flowering
    plants.
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    In this case the roots of the plants absorb
    water
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    and bring it to the leaves through tissues
    called xylem.
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    Carbon dioxide gets in and oxygen gets out
    through tiny pores in the leaves called stomata.
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    It's actually surprisingly important that
    plants keep oxygen levels low inside of their
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    leaves for reasons that we will get into later.
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    And finally, individual photons from the Sun
    are absorbed in the plant by a pigment called
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    chlorophyll.
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    Alright, you remember plant cells? If not,
    you can go watch the video where we spend
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    the whole time talking about plant cells.
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    One thing that plant cells
    have that animal cells don't... plastids.
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    And what is the most important plastid?
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    The chloroplast! Which is not, as it is sometimes
    portrayed, just a big fat sac of chlorophyl.
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    It's got complicated internal structure.
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    Now, the chlorophyll is stashed in membranous
    sacs called thylakoids. The thykaloids are
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    stacked into grana. Inside of
    the thykaloid is the lumen, and outside the
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    thykaloid (but still inside the
    chloroplast) is the stroma.
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    The thylakoid membranes are phospholipid bilayers, which, if you remember
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    means they're really good at maintaining
    concentration gradients of ions,
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    proteins and other things. This means keeping
    the concentration higher on one side
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    than the other of the membrane. You're going
    to need to know all of these things, I'm sorry.
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    Now that we've taken that little tour of
    the Chloroplast, it's time to get down to
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    the actual chemistry.
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    First thing that happens: A photon created
    by the fusion reactions of our sun is about
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    to end its 93 million mile journey by slapping
    into a molecule of cholorophyll.
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    This kicks off stage one, the light-dependent reactions proving
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    that, yes, nearly all life on our planet is
    fusion-powered.
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    When Chlorophyll gets hit by that photon,
    an electron absorbs that energy and gets excited.
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    This is the technical term for electrons gaining
    energy and not having anywhere to put it and
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    when it's done by a photon it's called
    photoexcitation, but let's just imagine,
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    for the moment anyway, that every photon is
    whatever
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    dreamy young man 12 year old girls are currently
    obsessed with, and electrons are 12 year old girls.
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    The trick now, and the entire trick
    of photosynthesis, is to convert the energy
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    of those 12 year old-
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    I mean, electrons, into something that the
    plant can use.
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    We are literally going to be spending the
    entire rest of the video talking about that.
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    I hope that that's ok with you.
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    This first Chlorophyll is not on its own here,
    it's part of an insanely complicated complex
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    of proteins, lipids, and other molecules called
    Photosystem II that contains at least 99 different
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    chemicals including over 30 individual chlorophyll
    molecules.
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    This is the first of four protein complexes
    that plants need for the light dependent reactions.
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    And if you think it's complicated that we
    call the first complex photosystem II instead
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    of Photosystem I, then you're welcome to
    call it by its full name, plastoquinone oxidoreductase.
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    Oh, no? You don't want to call it that?
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    Right then, photosystem II, or, if you want
    to be brief, PSII.
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    PSII and indeed all of the protein complexes
    in the light-dependent reactions, straddle
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    the membrane of the thylakoids in the chloroplasts.
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    That excited electron is now going to go on
    a journey designed to extract all of its new
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    energy and convert that energy into useful
    stuff. This is called the electron transport
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    chain, in which energized electrons lose their
    energy in a series of reactions that capture
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    the energy necessary to keep life living.
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    PSII's Chlorophyll now has this electron
    that is so excited that, when a special protein
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    designed specifically for stealing electrons
    shows up,
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    the electron actually leaps off of the chlorophyll
    molecule onto the protein, which we call a
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    mobile electron carrier because it's...
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    ...a mobile electron carrier.
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    The Chlorophyll then freaks out like a mother
    who has just had her 12 year old daughter
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    abducted by a teen idol and is like "WHAT
    DO I DO TO FIX THIS PROBLEM!"
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    and then it, in cooperation with the rest
    of PSII does something so amazing and important
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    that I can barely believe that it keeps happening
    every day.
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    It splits that ultra-stable molecule, H2O,
    stealing one of its electrons, to replenish
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    the one it lost.
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    The byproducts of this water splitting?
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    Hydrogen ions, which are just single protons,
    and oxygen. Sweet, sweet oxygen.
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    This reaction, my friends, is the reason that
    we can breathe.
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    Brief interjection: Next time someone says
    that they don't like it when there are chemicals
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    in their food, please remind them that all
    life is
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    made of chemicals and would they please stop
    pretending that the word chemical is somehow
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    a synonym for carcinogen!
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    Because, I mean, think about how chlorophyll
    feels when you say that! It spends all of
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    it's time and energy creating the air we
    breathe and then we're like
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    "EW! CHEMICALS ARE SO GROSS!"
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    Now, remember, all energized electrons from
    PSII have been picked up by electron carriers
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    and are now being transported onto our second
    protein complex
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    the Cytochrome Complex!
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    This little guy does two things...one, it
    serves as an intermediary between
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    PSII and PS I and, two, uses a bit of the
    energy from the electron to
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    pump another proton into the thylakoid.
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    So the thylakoid's starting to fill up with
    protons. We've created some by splitting water,
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    and we moved one in using the Cytochrome complex.
    But why are we doing this?
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    Well...basically, what we're doing, is charging
    the Thylakoid like a battery.
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    By pumping the thylakoid full of protons,
    we're creating a concentration gradient.
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    The protons then naturally want to get the
    heck away from each other, and so they push
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    their way through an enzyme straddling the
    thylakoid membrane called ATP Synthase, and
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    that enzyme uses that energy to pack an inorganic
    phosphate onto ADP, making ATP: the big daddy
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    of cellular energy.
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    All this moving along the electron transport
    chain requires energy, and as you might expect
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    electrons are entering lower and lower energy
    states as we move along. This makes sense
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    when you think about it. It's been a long
    while since
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    those photons zapped us, and we've been
    pumping hydrogen ions to create ATP and splitting
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    water and jumping onto different molecules
    and I'm tired just talking about it.
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    Luckily, as 450 million years of evolution
    would have it, our electron is now about to
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    be re-energized upon delivery to Photosystem I!
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    So, PS I is a similar mix of proteins and
    chlorophyll molecules that we saw in PSII,
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    but with some different products.
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    After a couple of photons re-excite a couple
    of electrons, the electrons pop off, and hitch
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    a ride onto another electron carrier.
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    This time, all of that energy will be used
    to help make NADPH, which, like ATP, exists
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    solely to carry energy around.
    Here, yet another enzyme
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    helps combine two electrons and one hydrogen
    ion with a little something called NADP+.
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    As you may recall from our recent talk about
    respiration, there are these sort of
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    distant cousins of B vitamins that are crucial
    to energy conversion. And in photosynthesis,
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    it's NADP+, and when it
    takes on those 2 electrons
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    and one hydrogen ion, it becomes NADPH.
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    So, what we're left with now, after the
    light dependent reactions is chemical energy
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    in the form of ATPs and NADPHs. And also of
    course, we should not forget the most useful
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    useless byproduct in the history of
    useless byproducts...oxygen.
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    If anyone needs a potty break, now would be
    a good time...or if you want to go re-watch
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    that rather long and complicated
    bit about light
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    dependent reactions, go ahead and do that...it's
    not simple, and it's not going to get any
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    simpler from here.
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    Because now we're moving along
    to the Calvin Cycle!
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    The Calvin Cycle is sometimes called the dark
    reactions, which is kind of a misnomer, because
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    they generally don't occur in the dark. They
    occur in the day along with the rest of the
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    reactions, but they don't require energy
    from photons. So it's more proper to say
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    light-independent. Or, if you're feeling
    non-descriptive...just say Stage 2.
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    Stage 2 is all about using the energy from
    those ATPs and NADPHs that we created in
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    Stage 1 to produce something
    actually useful for the plant.
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    The Calvin Cycle begins in the stroma, the
    empty space in the chloroplast, if you remember
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    correctly. And this phase is called carbon
    fixation because...yeah, we're about to
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    fix a CO2 molecule onto our starting point,
    Ribulose Bisphosphate or RuBP, which is always
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    around in the chloroplast because, not only
    is it the starting point of the Calvin Cycle,
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    it's also the end-point...
    which is why it's a cycle.
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    CO2 is fixed to RuBP with the help of an enzyme
    called ribulose 1,5 bisphosphate carboxylase
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    oxidase, which we generally
    shorten to RuBisCo.
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    I'm in the chair again! Excellent!
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    This time for a Biolo-graphy of RuBisCo.
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    Once upon a time, a one-celled organism was
    like "Man, I need more carbon so I can make
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    more little me's so I can take over the
    whole world."
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    Luckily for that little organism, there was
    a lot of CO2 in the atmosphere, and so it
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    evolved an enzyme that could suck up that CO2 and convert inorganic carbon into organic carbon.
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    This enzyme was called RuBisCo, and it wasn't
    particularly good at its job, but it was a
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    heck of a lot better than just hoping to run
    into some chemically formed organic carbon,
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    so the organism just made a ton of it to make
    up for how bad it was.
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    Not only did the little plant stick with it,
    it took over the entire planet, rapidly becoming
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    the dominant form of life.
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    Slowly, through other reactions, known as
    the light dependent reactions, plants increased
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    the amount of oxygen in the atmosphere. RuBisCo, having been designed in a world with
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    tiny amounts of oxygen in the
    atmosphere, started getting confused.
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    As often as half the time RuBisCo started
    slicing Ribulose Bisphosphate with Oxygen
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    instead of CO2, creating a toxic byproduct
    that plants then had to deal with in creative
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    and specialized ways.
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    This byproduct, called phosphogycolate, is
    believed to tinker with some enzyme functions,
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    including some involved in the Calvin cycle,
    so plants have to make other enzymes that
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    break it down into an amino acid (glycine),
    and some compounds that are actually useful
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    to the Calvin cycle.
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    But plants had already sort of gone all-in
    on the RuBisCo strategy and, to this day,
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    they have to produce huge amounts of it (scientists estimate that at any given time there
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    are about 40 billion tons of RuBisCo on the planet) and plants just deal with that toxic byproduct.
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    Another example, my friends, of unintelligent
    design.
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    Back to the cycle!
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    So Ribulose Bisphosphate gets a CO2 slammed
    onto it and then immediately the whole thing
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    gets crazy unstable. The only way to regain
    stability is for this new six-carbon chain
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    to break apart creating two molecules of
    3-Phosphoglycerate, and these are
    the first stable products of the calvin cycle.
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    For reasons that will become clear in a moment,
    we're actually going to do this to three
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    molecules of RuBP.
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    Now we enter the second phase,
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    Reduction.
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    Here, we need some energy. So some ATP slams
    a phosphate group onto the 3-Phosphoglycerate,
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    and then NADPH pops some electrons on and,
    voila, we have two molecules of Glyceraldehyde
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    3-Phosphate, or G3P, this is a high-energy,
    3-carbon compound that plants can convert
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    into pretty much any carbohydrate. Like glucose
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    for short term energy storage, cellulose for
    structure, starch for long-term storage.
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    And because of this, G3P is considered the
    ultimate product of photosynthesis.
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    However, unfortunately, this is not the end.
    We need 5 G3Ps to regenerate the 3 RuBPs that
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    we started with. We also need 9 molecules
    of ATP and 6 molecules of NADPH, so with all
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    of these chemical reactions, all of this chemical
    energy,
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    we can convert 3 RuBPs into 6 G3Ps but only
    one of those G3Ps gets to leave the cycle,
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    the other G3Ps, of course, being needed to
    regenerate the original 3 Ribulose Bisphosphates.
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    That regeneration is the last phase of the
    Calvin Cycle.
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    And that is how plants turn sunlight, water,
    and carbon dioxide into every living thing
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    you've ever talked to, played with, climbed
    on, loved, hated, or eaten. Not bad, plants.
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    I hope you understand. If you don't, not only
    do we have some selected references below
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    that you can check out, but of course, you
    can go re-watch anything that you didn't get
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    and hopefully, upon review, it will make a
    little bit more sense.
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    Thank you for watching. If you have questions,
    please leave them down in the comments below.
Title:
Photosynthesis: Crash Course Biology #8
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Video Language:
English
Duration:
13:15

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