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{{short description|Biological process to convert light into chemical energy}}
<!-- Introduction section. It is meant to be very nontechnial and accessible. Details come later. -->
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]
]s produced are stored in or used by the plant.]]
'''Photosynthesis''' is an important ] process in which ]s, ]e, ], and some ] harness the energy of ] to chemical energy and store it in the bonds of sugar, ]. Ultimately, nearly all living things depend on energy produced from photosynthesis for their nourishment, making it vital to life on ]. It is also responsible for producing the ] that makes up a large portion of the ]. Organisms that produce energy through photosynthesis are called ]s. Plants are the most visible representatives of photoautotrophs, but it should be emphasized that bacteria and algae as well contribute to the conversion of free energy into usable energy.
] and terrestrial ]. Dark red and blue-green indicate regions of high photosynthetic activity in the ocean and on land, respectively.]]


'''Photosynthesis''' ({{IPAc-en|ˌ|f|oʊ|t|ə|ˈ|s|ɪ|n|θ|ə|s|ɪ|s}} {{Respell|FOH|tə|SINTH|ə|sis}})<ref>{{Cite web |title=Photosynthesis |url=https://www.lexico.com/definition/photosynthesis |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220811182212/https://www.lexico.com/definition/photosynthesis |archive-date=2022-08-11 |access-date=2023-07-15 |website= lexico.com |type= ] UK English Dictionary |publisher= Oxford University Press |url-status=dead }}</ref> is a ] of ]es by which ], such as most plants, ], and ], convert ], typically from sunlight, into the ] necessary to fuel their ].
== Plant photosynthesis ==
''Photosynthesis'' usually refers to '''oxygenic photosynthesis''', a process that produces oxygen. Photosynthetic organisms store the chemical energy so produced within intracellular ]s (compounds containing carbon) like sugars, ], ] and ]es. To use this stored chemical energy, an organism's cells metabolize the organic compounds through ]. Photosynthesis plays a critical role in producing and maintaining the ] of the Earth's atmosphere, and it supplies most of the ] necessary for ] on Earth.<ref name="Bryant-2006">{{cite journal |last1= Bryant |first1= Donald A. |last2= Frigaard |first2= Niels-Ulrik |date= Nov 2006 |title= Prokaryotic photosynthesis and phototrophy illuminated |journal= ] |volume= 14 |issue= 11 |pages= 488–496 |doi= 10.1016/j.tim.2006.09.001 |pmid= 16997562 |url= https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0966842X06002265 }}</ref>


Some ] also perform ], which uses ] to split ] as a ] instead of water, producing ] instead of oxygen. ] such as '']'' also perform a type of non-] anoxygenic photosynthesis, where the simpler ] ] and its ] ]s are used to absorb green light and power ]s to directly synthesize ] (ATP), the "energy currency" of cells. Such archaeal photosynthesis might have been the earliest form of photosynthesis that evolved on Earth, as far back as the ], preceding that of cyanobacteria (see ]).
Most plants are ]s (exceptions include the infamous ]), which means they are able to synthesize food directly from inorganic compounds using light energy, instead of eating other organisms or relying on material derived from them. This is distinct from ]s that do ''not'' depend on light energy, but use energy from inorganic compounds.


While the details may differ between ], the process always begins when light energy is absorbed by the ]s, proteins that contain ]s or ]s. In plants, these pigments are ]s (a ] derivative that absorbs the red and blue ]s of light, thus reflecting green) held inside ]s, abundant in ] cells. In bacteria, they are embedded in the ]. In these light-dependent reactions, some energy is used to strip ]s from suitable substances, such as water, producing oxygen gas. The ] freed by the splitting of water is used in the creation of two important molecules that participate in energetic processes: reduced ] (NADPH) and ATP.
The energy for photosynthesis ultimately comes from absorbed ]s and involves a reducing agent, which is ] in the case of plants, releasing ] as a waste product. The light energy is converted to chemical energy, in the form of ] and ], using the ]s and is then available for ]. Most notably plants use the chemical energy to fix ] into ]s and other organic compounds through ]s. The overall equation for photosynthesis in green plants is:


In plants, algae, and cyanobacteria, sugars are synthesized by a subsequent sequence of {{nowrap|light-independent}} reactions called the ]. In this process, atmospheric carbon dioxide is incorporated into already existing organic compounds, such as ] (RuBP).<ref>{{cite book |last1= Reece |first1= Jane B. |last2= Urry |first2= Lisa A. |last3= Cain |first3= Michael L. |last4= Wasserman |first4= Steven A. |last5= Minorsky |first5= Peter V. |last6= Jackson |first6= Robert B. |last7= Campbel |first7= Neil A. |year= 2011 |title= Biology |edition= International |publisher= ] |location= Upper Saddle River, NJ |isbn= 978-0-321-73975-9 |pages= |quote=This initial incorporation of carbon into organic compounds is known as carbon fixation |url= https://archive.org/details/isbn_9781256158769/page/235 }}</ref> Using the ATP and NADPH produced by the light-dependent reactions, the resulting compounds are then ] and removed to form further carbohydrates, such as ]. In other bacteria, different mechanisms like the ] are used to achieve the same end.
:''n'' CO<sub>2</sub> + ''2n'' H<sub>2</sub>O + light energy &rarr; (CH<sub>2</sub>O)''<sub>n</sub>'' + ''n'' O<sub>2</sub> + ''n'' H<sub>2</sub>O


The first photosynthetic organisms probably ] early in the ] using ]s such as hydrogen or hydrogen sulfide, rather than water, as sources of electrons.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Olson JM |title= Photosynthesis in the Archean era |journal= ] |volume= 88 |issue= 2 |pages= 109–117 |date= May 2006 |bibcode= 2006PhoRe..88..109O |doi= 10.1007/s11120-006-9040-5 |pmid= 16453059 |s2cid= 20364747 }}</ref> Cyanobacteria appeared later; the ] they produced contributed directly to the ],<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Buick R |date= Aug 2008 |title= When did oxygenic photosynthesis evolve? |journal= ] |volume= 363 |issue= 1504 |pages= 2731–2743 |doi= 10.1098/rstb.2008.0041 |pmc= 2606769 |pmid= 18468984 }}</ref> which rendered the evolution of complex life possible. The average rate of energy captured by global photosynthesis is approximately 130 ],<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors=Nealson KH, Conrad PG |title=Life: past, present and future |journal=] |volume= 354 |issue= 1392 |pages= 1923–1939 |date= Dec 1999 |pmid=10670014 |pmc=1692713 |doi=10.1098/rstb.1999.0532}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1= Whitmarsh |first1= John |last2= Govindjee |year= 1999 |chapter= Chapter 2: The photosynthetic process |editor1= Singhal G.S. |editor2= Renger G. |editor3= Sopory S.K. |editor4= Irrgang K.D. |editor5= Govindjee |title= Concepts in photobiology: photosynthesis and photomorphogenesis |location= Boston |publisher= ] |pages= 11–51 |isbn= 978-0-7923-5519-9 |quote= It is estimated that photosynthetic organisms remove {{val|100|e=15}} grams of carbon/year fixed by photosynthetic organisms. This is equivalent to {{val|4|e=18|u=kJ|up=yr}} of free energy stored in reduced carbon. (in Part 8: "Global photosynthesis and the atmosphere") |chapter-url= http://www.life.illinois.edu/govindjee/paper/gov.html#80 |access-date= 2012-07-07 |archive-date= 2010-08-14 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20100814191216/http://www.life.illinois.edu/govindjee/paper/gov.html#80 |url-status= live }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |vauthors=Steger U, Achterberg W, Blok K, Bode H, Frenz W, Gather C, Hanekamp G, Imboden D, Jahnke M, Kost M, Kurz R, Nutzinger HG, Ziesemer T |year= 2005 |title= Sustainable development and innovation in the energy sector |publisher= ] |location= Berlin |page= 32 |isbn= 978-3-540-23103-5 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=duVJsAqXlkEC&q=photosynthesis%20terawatt&pg=PA32 |quote= The average global rate of photosynthesis is 130 TW. |access-date= 2016-02-21 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20160902191543/https://books.google.com/books?id=duVJsAqXlkEC&lpg=PA32&dq=photosynthesis%20terawatt&pg=PA32#v=onepage&q=photosynthesis%20terawatt&f=false |archive-date= 2016-09-02 |url-status= live }}</ref> which is about eight times the total ].<ref>{{cite web |title= World Consumption of Primary Energy by Energy Type and Selected Country Groups, 1980–2004 |format= XLS |publisher= ] |date= July 31, 2006 |url= http://www.eia.doe.gov/pub/international/iealf/table18.xls |access-date=2007-01-20 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061109125803/http://www.eia.doe.gov/pub/international/iealf/table18.xls |archive-date=November 9, 2006 }}</ref> Photosynthetic organisms also convert around 100–115 billion ]s (91–104 Pg ], or billions of metric tons), of carbon into ] per year.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Field CB, Behrenfeld MJ, Randerson JT, Falkowski P |date= Jul 1998 |title= Primary production of the biosphere: integrating terrestrial and oceanic components |journal= ] |volume= 281 |issue= 5374 |pages= 237–240 |bibcode= 1998Sci...281..237F |doi= 10.1126/science.281.5374.237 |pmid= 9657713 |url= http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/9gm7074q |access-date= 2018-04-20 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20180925215921/https://escholarship.org/uc/item/9gm7074q |archive-date= 2018-09-25 |url-status= live }}</ref><ref name="McGraw-Hill-2007">{{cite book |chapter= Photosynthesis |title= McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of Science & Technology |volume= 13 |location= New York |publisher= ] |year= 2007 |isbn= 978-0-07-144143-8 }}</ref> Photosynthesis was discovered in 1779 by ] who showed that plants need light, not just soil and water.


==Overview==
Where n is defined according to the structure of the resulting carbohydrate. However, ] ]s and ] are the primary products, so the following generalised equation is often used to represent photosynthesis:
{{Main article|Biological carbon fixation}}
]
Most photosynthetic organisms are ]s, which means that they are able to ] food directly from ] and ] using ] from light. However, not all organisms use carbon dioxide as a source of carbon atoms to carry out photosynthesis; ]s use organic compounds, rather than carbon dioxide, as a source of carbon.<ref name="Bryant-2006"/>


In ]s, ], and ], photosynthesis releases oxygen. This '''oxygenic photosynthesis''' is by far the most common type of photosynthesis used by living organisms. Some shade-loving plants (sciophytes) produce such low levels of oxygen during photosynthesis that they use all of it themselves instead of releasing it to the atmosphere.<ref></ref>
:6 CO<sub>2</sub> + 12 H<sub>2</sub>O + light energy &rarr; C<sub>6</sub>H<sub>12</sub>O<sub>6</sub> + 6 O<sub>2</sub> + 6 H<sub>2</sub>O
More specifically, photosynthetic reactions usually produces an intermediate product, which is then converted to the final hexose carbohydrate products. These carbohydrate products are then variously used to form other organic compounds, such as the building material ], as precursors for ] and ] biosynthesis or as a fuel in ]. The latter not only occurs in plants, but also in ]s when the energy from plants get passed through a ]. In general outline, cellular respiration is the opposite of photosynthesis: glucose and other compounds are oxidised to produce carbon dioxide, water, and chemical energy. However, both processes actually take place through a different sequence of reactions and in different cellular compartments.


Although there are some differences between oxygenic photosynthesis in plants, algae, and cyanobacteria, the overall process is quite similar in these organisms. There are also many varieties of ], used mostly by bacteria, which consume carbon dioxide but do not release oxygen.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1= George |first1= Drishya M. |last2= Vincent |first2= Annette S. |last3= Mackey |first3= Hamish R. |date= 2020 |title= An overview of anoxygenic phototrophic bacteria and their applications in environmental biotechnology for sustainable Resource recovery |journal= Biotechnology Reports (Amsterdam, Netherlands) |volume= 28 |pages= e00563 |doi= 10.1016/j.btre.2020.e00563 |issn= 2215-017X |pmc= 7714679 |pmid= 33304839 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last= Fuchs |first= Georg |date= 1987 |chapter= Carbon Dioxide Reduction by Anaerobic Bacteria |editor-last= Aresta |editor-first= M. |editor2-last= Forti |editor2-first= G. |title= Carbon Dioxide as a Source of Carbon: Biochemical and Chemical Uses |place= Dordrecht |publisher= Springer Netherlands |language= en |pages= 263–273 |doi= 10.1007/978-94-009-3923-3_14 |isbn= 978-94-009-3923-3 |chapter-url= https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-3923-3_14 |access-date= 2024-06-10 }}</ref>
Plants capture light primarily using the ] ], which is the reason that most plants have a green color. The function of chlorophyll is often supported by other ]s such as ]s and ]s. Both chlorophyll and accessory pigments are contained in ]s (compartments within the ]) called ]s. Although all cells in the green parts of a plant have chloroplasts, most of the energy is captured in the ]. The cells in the interior tissues of a leaf, called the ], contain about half a million chloroplasts for every square millimeter of leaf. The surface of the leaf is uniformly coated with a water-resistant, ]y ], that protects the leaf from excessive ] of water as well as decreasing the absorption of ] or ] ] to reduce ]ing. The transparent, colourless ] layer allows light to pass through to the ] mesophyll cells where most of the photosynthesis takes place.


Carbon dioxide is converted into sugars in a process called ]; photosynthesis captures energy from sunlight to convert carbon dioxide into ]s. Carbon fixation is an ] ] reaction. In general outline, photosynthesis is the opposite of ]: while photosynthesis is a process of reduction of carbon dioxide to carbohydrates, cellular respiration is the oxidation of carbohydrates or other ]s to carbon dioxide. Nutrients used in cellular respiration include carbohydrates, amino acids and fatty acids. These nutrients are oxidized to produce carbon dioxide and water, and to release chemical energy to drive the organism's ].
== Photosynthesis in algae and bacteria ==
{{section-stub}}


Photosynthesis and cellular respiration are distinct processes, as they take place through different sequences of chemical reactions and in different ]s (cellular respiration in ]).<ref>{{Cite journal |last1= Stefano |first1= George B. |last2= Snyder |first2= Christopher |last3= Kream |first3= Richard M. |date= 2015-07-17 |title= Mitochondria, Chloroplasts in Animal and Plant Cells: Significance of Conformational Matching |journal= Medical Science Monitor: International Medical Journal of Experimental and Clinical Research |volume= 21 |pages= 2073–2078 |doi= 10.12659/MSM.894758 |issn= 1643-3750 |pmc= 4517925 |pmid= 26184462 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1= Shimakawa |first1= Ginga |last2= Matsuda |first2= Yusuke |last3= Burlacot |first3= Adrien |date= 2024 |title= Crosstalk between photosynthesis and respiration in microbes |journal= Journal of Biosciences |volume= 49 |issue= 2 |pages=45 |doi= 10.1007/s12038-023-00417-4 |issn= 0973-7138 |pmid= 38516912 |url= https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38516912 }}</ref>
Algae range from multicellular forms like ] to ], single-celled organisms. Although they are not as complex as land plants, photosynthesis takes place biochemically the same way. Like plants, algae have chloroplasts and chlorophyll, but various accessory pigments are present in some algae such as phycoerythrin in red algae (rhodophytes) , resulting in a wide variety of colours. All algae produce oxygen, and many are autotrophic. However, some are ]ic, relying on materials produced by other organisms.


The general ] for photosynthesis as first proposed by ] is:{{sfn|Whitmarsh|Govindjee|1999|p=13}}
Photosynthetic bacteria do not have chloroplasts (or any membrane-bound organelles), instead, photosynthesis takes place directly within the cell. ] contain thylakoid membranes very similar to those in chloroplasts and are the only prokaryotes that perform oxygen-generating photosynthesis, in fact chloroplasts are now considered to have ] from an ] bacterium, which was also an ancestor of and later gave rise to cyanobacterium. The other photosynthetic bacteria have a variety of different pigments, called ]s, and do not produce oxygen. Some bacteria such as ''Chromatium'', oxidize hydrogen sulfide instead of water for photosynthesis, producing sulfur as waste.
: {{underset|carbon<br/>dioxide|CO<sub>2</sub>}} + {{underset|electron donor|2H<sub>2</sub>A}} + {{underset|light energy|]}} → {{underset|]|}} + {{underset|oxidized<br/>electron<br/>donor|2A}} + {{underset|water|H<sub>2</sub>O}}


Since water is used as the electron donor in oxygenic photosynthesis, the equation for this process is:
== Molecular production ==
: {{underset|carbon<br/>dioxide|CO<sub>2</sub>}} + {{underset|water|2H<sub>2</sub>O}} + {{underset|light energy|photons}} → {{underset|carbohydrate|}} + {{underset|oxygen|O<sub>2</sub>}} + {{underset|water|H<sub>2</sub>O}}
====Light to chemical energy====
{{main|Light-dependent reaction}}
]
]
The light energy is converted to chemical energy using the ]s. The products of the light dependent reactions are ] from photophosphorylation and ] from photoreduction. Both are then utilized as an energy source for the ].
====Z scheme====
In plants, the '''light-dependent reactions''' occur in the ]s of the ]s and use light energy to synthesize ATP and NADPH. The ]s are captured in the ]es of ] by ] and ]s (see diagram at right). When a '''chorophyll ''a''''' molecule at a photosystem's reaction center absorbs energy, an electron is excited and transferred to an electron-acceptor molecule through a process called ]. These electrons are shuttled through an ] that initially functions to generate a ] across the membrane, the so called '''''Z-scheme''''' shown in the diagram. An ] enzyme uses the chemiosmotic potential to make ATP during photophosphorylation while ] is a product of the terminal ] reaction in the ''Z-scheme''.


This equation emphasizes that water is both a reactant in the ] and a product of the ], but canceling ''n'' water molecules from each side gives the net equation:
====Water photolysis====
The NADPH is the main ] in chloroplasts, providing a source of energetic electrons to other reactions. Its production leaves chlorophyll with a deficit of electrons (oxidized), which must be obtained from some other reducing agent. The excited electrons lost from chlorophyll in photosystem I are replaced from the electron transport chain by ]. However, since photosystem II includes the first steps of the ''Z-scheme'', an external source of electrons is required to reduce its oxidized '''chlorophyll ''a''''' molecules. This role is played by water during a reaction known as ] and results in water being split to give ]s, ] and ] ions. Photosystem II is the only known biological ] that carries out this oxidation of water. Initially, the hydrogen ions from photolysis contribute to the chemiosmotic potential but eventually they combine with the ] molecule NADP<sup>+</sup> to form ]. Oxygen is a waste product of light-independent reactions, but the majority of organisms on Earth use oxygen for ], including photosynthetic organisms.


: {{underset|carbon<br/>dioxide|CO<sub>2</sub>}} + {{underset| water |H<sub>2</sub>O}} + {{underset|light energy|photons}} → {{underset|carbohydrate|}} + {{underset| oxygen |O<sub>2</sub>}}
====Oxygen and photosynthesis====
With respect to oxygen and photosynthesis, there are two important concepts.
*'''''Plant and algal cells also use oxygen for cellular respiration''''', although they have a net output of oxygen since much more is produced during photosynthesis.


Other processes substitute other compounds (such as ]) for water in the electron-supply role; for example some microbes use sunlight to oxidize arsenite to ]:<ref>''Anaerobic Photosynthesis'', ], '''86''', 33, August 18, 2008, p. 36</ref> The equation for this reaction is:
*'''''Oxygen is a product of the photolysis reaction not the fixation of carbon dioxide''''' during the light-independent reactions. Consequently, the source of oxygen during photosynthesis is water, NOT carbon dioxide.
: {{underset|carbon<br/>dioxide|CO<sub>2</sub>}} + {{underset|<br/>arsenite|(AsO{{su|b=3|p=3−}})}} + {{underset|light energy|photons}} → {{underset|<br/>arsenate|(AsO{{su|b=4|p=3−}})}} + {{underset|carbon<br/>monoxide|CO}}(used to build other compounds in subsequent reactions)<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Kulp TR, Hoeft SE, Asao M, Madigan MT, Hollibaugh JT, Fisher JC, Stolz JF, Culbertson CW, Miller LG, Oremland RS | author10-link= Ronald Oremland |date= Aug 2008 |title= Arsenic(III) fuels anoxygenic photosynthesis in hot spring biofilms from Mono Lake, California |journal= Science |volume= 321 |issue= 5891 |pages= 967–970 |bibcode= 2008Sci...321..967K |doi= 10.1126/science.1160799 |pmid= 18703741 |s2cid= 39479754 |url= https://semanticscholar.org/paper/b193d8bd3632fb917e5d3a7fc9cb9d11fb817669 |access-date= 2020-01-17 |archive-date= 2020-07-28 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20200728092205/https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/Arsenic(III)-Fuels-Anoxygenic-Photosynthesis-in-Hot-Kulp-Hoeft/b193d8bd3632fb917e5d3a7fc9cb9d11fb817669 |url-status= live }}</ref>


Photosynthesis occurs in two stages. In the first stage, ''light-dependent reactions'' or ''light reactions'' capture the energy of light and use it to make the hydrogen carrier ] and the energy-storage molecule ]. During the second stage, the ''light-independent reactions'' use these products to capture and reduce carbon dioxide.
====Bacterial variations====
The concept that oxygen production is not directly associated with the fixation of carbon dioxide was first proposed by ] in the 1930s, who studied photosynthetic bacteria. Aside from the ], bacteria only have one photosystem and use reducing agents other than water. They get electrons from a variety of different inorganic chemicals including ] or ], so for most of these bacteria oxygen is not produced.


Most organisms that use oxygenic photosynthesis use ] for the light-dependent reactions, although at least three use shortwave ] or, more specifically, far-red radiation.<ref>{{cite web |title= Scientists discover unique microbe in California's largest lake |website= bio-medicine.org |date= January 2005 |url= http://www.bio-medicine.org/biology-news/Scientists-discover-unique-microbe-in-Californias-largest-lake-203-1/ |access-date= 2009-07-20 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20090712152053/http://www.bio-medicine.org/biology-news/Scientists-discover-unique-microbe-in-Californias-largest-lake-203-1/ |archive-date= 2009-07-12 |url-status= dead }}</ref>
Others, such as the halophiles (an Archeae) produced so called purple membranes where the bacteriorhodopsin could harvest light and produce energy. The purple membranes was one of the first to be used to demonstrate the chemiosmotic theory: light hit the membranes and the pH of the solution that contained the purple membranes dropped as protons were pumping out of the membrane.


Some organisms employ even more radical variants of photosynthesis. Some ] use a simpler method that employs a pigment similar to those used for vision in animals. The ] changes its configuration in response to sunlight, acting as a proton pump. This produces a proton gradient more directly, which is then converted to chemical energy. The process does not involve carbon dioxide fixation and does not release oxygen, and seems to have evolved separately from the more common types of photosynthesis.<ref>{{Cite book |vauthors= Ingrouille M, Eddie B |date= 2006-08-17 |title= Plants: Diversity and Evolution |publisher= Cambridge University Press |pages= 13–14 |isbn= 978-1-139-45546-6 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=L8DHHSO2RFsC&dq=bacteriorhodopsin+photosynthesis+evolved+separately&pg=PA14 }}</ref>
===Carbon fixation ===
{{main|Carbon fixation}}


==Photosynthetic membranes and organelles==
The ] of carbon dioxide is a ] in which ] combines with a five-carbon sugar, ] (RuBP), to give two molecules of a three-carbon compound, ] (GP). This compound is also sometimes known as 3-phosphoglycerate (PGA). GP, in the presence of ] and ] from the light-dependent stages, is reduced to ] (G3P). This product is also referred to as 3-phosphoglyceraldehyde (]) or even as triose phosphate (a ]). This is the point at which ]s are produced during photosynthesis. Some of the ] phosphates condense to form ] phosphates, ], ] and ] or are converted to acetylcoenzyme A to make ] and ]. Others go on to regenerate RuBP so the process can continue (see ]).
{{Main|Chloroplast|Thylakoid}}
[[File:Chloroplast.svg|thumb|upright=1.4|right|'''Chloroplast ultrastructure''':{{ordered list
|outer membrane
|intermembrane space
|inner membrane (1+2+3: envelope)
|stroma (aqueous fluid)
|thylakoid lumen (inside of thylakoid)
|thylakoid membrane
|granum (stack of thylakoids)
|thylakoid (lamella)
|starch
|ribosome
|plastidial DNA
|plastoglobule (drop of lipids)}}
]]
In photosynthetic bacteria, the proteins that gather light for photosynthesis are embedded in ]s. In its simplest form, this involves the membrane surrounding the cell itself.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Tavano CL, Donohue TJ |date= December 2006 |title= Development of the bacterial photosynthetic apparatus |journal= ] |volume= 9 |issue= 6 |pages= 625–631 |doi= 10.1016/j.mib.2006.10.005 |pmc= 2765710 |pmid= 17055774 }}</ref> However, the membrane may be tightly folded into cylindrical sheets called ]s,<ref name="Mullineaux-1999">{{cite journal |vauthors= Mullineaux CW |year= 1999 |title= The thylakoid membranes of cyanobacteria: structure, dynamics and function |journal= ] |volume= 26 |issue= 7 |pages= 671–677 |doi= 10.1071/PP99027 }}</ref> or bunched up into round ] called ''intracytoplasmic membranes''.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Sener MK, Olsen JD, Hunter CN, Schulten K |date= October 2007 |title= Atomic-level structural and functional model of a bacterial photosynthetic membrane vesicle |journal= ] |volume= 104 |issue= 40 |pages= 15723–15728 |bibcode= 2007PNAS..10415723S |doi= 10.1073/pnas.0706861104 |doi-access= free |pmc= 2000399 |pmid= 17895378 }}</ref> These structures can fill most of the interior of a cell, giving the membrane a very large surface area and therefore increasing the amount of light that the bacteria can absorb.<ref name="Mullineaux-1999"/>


In plants and algae, photosynthesis takes place in ]s called ]s. A typical ] contains about 10 to 100 chloroplasts. The chloroplast is enclosed by a membrane. This membrane is composed of a phospholipid inner membrane, a phospholipid outer membrane, and an intermembrane space. Enclosed by the membrane is an aqueous fluid called the stroma. Embedded within the stroma are stacks of thylakoids (grana), which are the site of photosynthesis. The thylakoids appear as flattened disks. The thylakoid itself is enclosed by the thylakoid membrane, and within the enclosed volume is a lumen or thylakoid space. Embedded in the thylakoid membrane are integral and ] complexes of the photosynthetic system.
== Discovery ==
Although some of the steps in photosynthesis are still not completely understood, the overall photosynthetic equation has been known since the ].


Plants absorb light primarily using the ] ]. The green part of the light spectrum is not absorbed but is reflected, which is the reason that most plants have a green color. Besides chlorophyll, plants also use pigments such as ]s and ]s.<ref>{{cite book |vauthors=Campbell NA, Williamson B, Heyden RJ |title=Biology Exploring Life |publisher=] |location=Upper Saddle River, New Jersey |year=2006 |isbn=978-0-13-250882-7 |url=http://www.phschool.com/el_marketing.html |access-date=2009-02-03 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141102041816/http://www.phschool.com/el_marketing.html |archive-date=2014-11-02 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Algae also use chlorophyll, but various other pigments are present, such as ], ]s, and ]s in ], ] in ] (rhodophytes) and ] in ] and ] resulting in a wide variety of colors.
] began the research of the process in the mid-1600s when he carefully measured the ] of the soil used by a plant and the mass of the plant as it grew. After noticing that the soil mass changed very little, he hypothesized that the mass of the growing plant must come from the water, the only substance he added to the potted plant. This was a partially accurate hypothesis - much of the gained mass also comes from carbon dioxide as well as water. However, this was a signalling point to the idea that the bulk of a plant's ] comes from the inputs of photosynthesis, not the soil itself.


These pigments are embedded in plants and algae in complexes called antenna proteins. In such proteins, the pigments are arranged to work together. Such a combination of proteins is also called a ].<ref>{{cite journal | title=Molecular mechanism of SRP-dependent light-harvesting protein transport to the thylakoid membrane in plants | vauthors = Ziehe D, Dünschede B, Schünemann D | journal=Photosynthesis Research | volume=138 | issue=3 | pages=303–313 | date=December 2018 | pmid=29956039 | pmc=6244792 | doi=10.1007/s11120-018-0544-6 | bibcode = 2018PhoRe.138..303Z }}</ref>
], a chemist and minister, discovered that when he isolated a volume of air under an inverted jar, and burned a candle in it, the candle would burn out very quickly, much before it ran out of wax. He further discovered that a mouse could similarly "injure" air. He then showed that the air that had been "injured" by the candle and the mouse could be restored by a plant.


Although all cells in the green parts of a plant have chloroplasts, the majority of those are found in specially adapted structures called ]. Certain species adapted to conditions of strong sunlight and ]ity, such as many '']'' and ] species, have their main photosynthetic organs in their stems. The cells in the interior tissues of a leaf, called the ], can contain between 450,000 and 800,000 chloroplasts for every square millimeter of leaf. The surface of the leaf is coated with a water-resistant ]y ] that protects the leaf from excessive ] of water and decreases the absorption of ] or ] ] to minimize ]ing. The transparent ] layer allows light to pass through to the ] mesophyll cells where most of the photosynthesis takes place.
In ], ], court physician to the ]n Empress, repeated Priestley's experiments. He discovered that it was the influence of sun and light on the plant that could cause it to rescue a mouse in a matter of hours.


==Light-dependent reactions==
In ], ], a French pastor, showed that CO<sub>2</sub> was the "fixed" or "injured" air and that it was taken up by plants in photosynthesis. Soon afterwards, ] showed that the increase in mass of the plant as it grows could not be due only to uptake of CO<sub>2</sub>, but also to the incorporation of water. Thus the basic reaction by which photosynthesis is used to produce food (such as glucose) was outlined.
{{Main|Light-dependent reactions}}
]
In the ], one ] of the pigment ] absorbs one ] and loses one ]. This electron is taken up by a modified form of chlorophyll called ], which passes the electron to a ] molecule, starting the flow of electrons down an ] that leads to the ultimate ] of ] to ]. In addition, this creates a ] (energy gradient) across the ], which is used by ] in the synthesis of ]. The chlorophyll molecule ultimately regains the electron it lost when a ] molecule is split in a process called ], which releases ].


The overall equation for the light-dependent reactions under the conditions of non-cyclic electron flow in green plants is:<ref name="Raven-2005">{{cite book |vauthors= Raven PH, Evert RF, Eichhorn SE |year= 2005 |title= Biology of Plants |edition= 7th |location= New York |publisher= ] |pages= |isbn= 978-0-7167-1007-3 |url= https://archive.org/details/biologyofplants00rave_0 |url-access= registration }}</ref>
Modern scientists built on the foundation of knowledge from those scientists centuries ago and were able to discover many things.


{{block indent|2 H<sub>2</sub>O + 2 NADP<sup>+</sup> + 3 ADP + 3 P<sub>i</sub> + light → 2 NADPH + 2 H<sup>+</sup> + 3 ATP + O<sub>2</sub>}}
] made key discoveries explaining the chemistry of photosynthesis. By studying ] and green bacteria he was the first scientist to demonstrate that photosynthesis is a light-dependent ] reaction, in which hydrogen reduces carbon dioxide.


Not all ]s of ] can support photosynthesis. The photosynthetic ] depends on the type of ]s present. For example, in ], the action spectrum resembles the ] for ]s and ]s with absorption peaks in violet-blue and red light. In ], the action spectrum is blue-green light, which allows these ] to use the blue end of the spectrum to grow in the deeper waters that filter out the longer wavelengths (red light) used by above-ground green plants. The non-absorbed part of the ] is what gives ]s their ] (e.g., green plants, red algae, ]) and is the least effective for photosynthesis in the respective ]s.
Further experiments to prove that the oxygen developed during the photosynthesis of green plants came from water, were performed by ] in ] and ]. He showed that isolated ]s give off oxygen in the presence of unnatural reducing agents like ] ], ] or ] after exposure to light. The Hill reaction is as follows:


===Z scheme===
:2 H<sub>2</sub>O + 2 A + (light, chloroplasts) &rarr; 2 AH<sub>2</sub> + O<sub>2</sub>
]
In ]s, ]s occur in the ]s of the ]s where they drive the synthesis of ] and ]. The light-dependent reactions are of two forms: ].


In the non-cyclic reaction, the photons are captured in the light-harvesting ]es of ] by ] and other ] (see diagram "Z-scheme"). The absorption of a photon by the antenna complex loosens an electron by a process called ]. The antenna system is at the core of the ] molecule of the photosystem II reaction center. That loosened electron is taken up by the primary ] molecule, ]. As the electrons are shuttled through an ] (the so-called ''Z-scheme'' shown in the diagram), a ] is generated by pumping ] (]<sup>+</sup>) across the ] and into the ]. An ATP synthase ] uses that ] to make ATP during ], whereas ] is a product of the terminal ] reaction in the ''Z-scheme''. The electron enters a chlorophyll ] in ]. There it is further excited by the ] absorbed by that ]. The electron is then passed along a chain of ]s to which it transfers some of its ]. The energy delivered to the electron acceptors is used to move ]s across the thylakoid membrane into the ]. The electron is eventually used to ] the coenzyme ] with an ] to NADPH (which has functions in the light-independent reaction); at that point, the path of that electron ends.
where A is the electron acceptor. Therefore, in light the electron acceptor is reduced and oxygen is evolved.


The cyclic reaction is similar to that of the non-cyclic but differs in that it generates only ATP, and no reduced NADP (NADPH) is created. The cyclic reaction takes place only at photosystem I. Once the electron is displaced from the photosystem, the electron is passed down the electron acceptor molecules and returns to photosystem I, from where it was emitted, hence the name ''cyclic reaction''.
] and ] used radioactive isotopes to determine that the oxygen liberated in photosynthesis came from the water.


===Water photolysis===
] and his partner Benson were able to puzzle out each stage in the dark or light-independent phase of photosynthesis, known as the ].
{{Main|Photodissociation|Oxygen evolution}}
] through a photosystem will leave the ] of that photosystem ]. Elevating another electron will first require re-reduction of the reaction center. The excited electrons lost from the reaction center (]) of ] are replaced by transfer from ], whose electrons come from electron transport through ]. Photosystem II, as the first step of the ''Z-scheme'', requires an external source of electrons to reduce its oxidized ] reaction center. The source of electrons for photosynthesis in green plants and ] is water. Two water molecules are oxidized by the energy of four successive charge-separation reactions of photosystem II to yield a molecule of ] oxygen and four ] ions. The electrons yielded are transferred to a redox-active ] residue that is oxidized by the energy of ]. This resets the ability of P680 to absorb another photon and release another ] electron. The oxidation of water is ] in photosystem II by a redox-active structure that contains four ] ions and a ]; this ] binds two ] and contains the four oxidizing equivalents that are used to drive the water-oxidizing reaction (Kok's S-state diagrams). The hydrogen ions are released in the ] and therefore contribute to the transmembrane chemiosmotic potential that leads to ]. Oxygen is a ] of light-dependent reactions, but the majority of organisms on ] use oxygen and its energy for ], including ]s.<ref>{{Cite web |url= https://www2.lbl.gov/vkyachan/ |title= Yachandra / Yano Group |publisher= Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory |access-date= 2019-07-22 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20190722054431/https://www2.lbl.gov/vkyachan/ |archive-date= 2019-07-22 |url-status= dead }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Pushkar Y, Yano J, Sauer K, Boussac A, Yachandra VK |date= February 2008 |title= Structural changes in the Mn4Ca cluster and the mechanism of photosynthetic water splitting |journal= ] |volume= 105 |issue= 6 |pages= 1879–1884 |bibcode= 2008PNAS..105.1879P |doi= 10.1073/pnas.0707092105 |doi-access= free |pmc= 2542863 |pmid= 18250316 }}</ref>


==Light-independent reactions==
A ] winning scientist, ], was able to discover the function and significance of the electron transport chain.


===Calvin cycle===
==Bioenergetics of photosynthesis==
{{Main|Light-independent reactions|Carbon fixation}}
{{section-stub}}
In the ] (or "dark") reactions, the enzyme ] captures ] from the ] and, in a ] called the ], uses the newly formed ] and releases ], which are later ] to form ] and ]. The overall equation for the light-independent reactions in ] is<ref name="Raven-2005"/>{{rp|128}}


{{block indent|3 CO<sub>2</sub> + 9 ATP + 6 NADPH + 6 H<sup>+</sup> → C<sub>3</sub>H<sub>6</sub>O<sub>3</sub>-phosphate + 9 ADP + 8 P<sub>i</sub> + 6 NADP<sup>+</sup> + 3 H<sub>2</sub>O}}
Photosynthesis is a physiological phenomenon that converts ] into photochemical energy. This physiological phenomenon may be described thermodynamically in terms of changes in ], ] and ]. The ] of photosynthesis, driven by light, causes a change in entropy that in turn yields a usable source of energy for the plant.


]]]
The following ] summarizes the products and reactants of photosynthesis in the typical green photosynthesizing plant:
] produces the ], which is then converted into the final ] products. The ] photosynthesis produces are then used to form other ]s, such as the building material ], the ] for ] and ] biosynthesis, or as a fuel in ]. The latter occurs not only in ]s but also in ]s when the ] and ] from plants is passed through a ].
CO<sub>2</sub> + H<sub>2</sub>O &rarr; O<sub>2</sub> + (CH<sub>2</sub>O) + 112 ]/] CO<sub>2</sub>


The ] or ] of ] is a process in which carbon dioxide combines with a ], ], to ] two ]s of a three-carbon compound, ], also known as 3-phosphoglycerate. Glycerate 3-phosphate, in the presence of ] and ] produced during the light-dependent stages, is reduced to ]. This ] is also referred to as 3-phosphoglyceraldehyde (PGAL) or, more generically, as ] phosphate. Most (five out of six molecules) of the glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate produced are used to regenerate ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate so the process can continue. The triose phosphates not thus "recycled" often condense to form ] phosphates, which ultimately yield ], ], and ], as well as ] and ]. The ]s produced during carbon ] yield ]s that can be used for other ]s like the production of ] and ].


===Carbon concentrating mechanisms===
On earth, there are two sources of free energy: light energy from the sun, and terrestrial sources, including volcanoes, hot springs and radioactivity of certain elements. The biochemical value of electromagnetic radiation has led plants to use the free energy from the sun in particular. ], which is used specifically by green plants to photosynthesize, may result in the formation of electronically excited states of certain substances called ] (Gregory). For example, '''Chlorophyll a''' is a pigment which acts as a catalyst, converting solar energy into photochemical energy that is necessary for photosynthesis (Govindjee).


====On land====
With the presence of solar energy, the plant has a usable source of energy, which is termed the free energy (G) of the system. However, thermal energy is not completely interconvertible, which means that the character of the solar energy may lead to the limited convertibility of it into forms that may be used by the plant. This relates back to the work of ]: the change in free energy (Δ<sub>r</sub>G) is related to both the change in entropy (Δ<sub>r</sub>S) and the change in ] (Δ<sub>r</sub>H) of the system (Rabinowitch).
{{Main|C4 carbon fixation|CAM photosynthesis|Alarm photosynthesis}}
]. (This image mistakenly shows ] instead of ], and all the ] ending in "-ate" are shown as unionized acids, such as ] and so on).]]
In ], plants close their ] to prevent water loss. Under these conditions, {{co2}} will decrease and oxygen ], produced by the ] of photosynthesis, will increase, causing an increase of ] by the ] activity of ] (RuBisCO) and decrease in carbon fixation. Some plants have ] mechanisms to increase the {{co2}} concentration in the leaves under these conditions.<ref name="Williams-2013">{{cite journal |vauthors= Williams BP, Johnston IG, Covshoff S, Hibberd JM |date= September 2013 |title= Phenotypic landscape inference reveals multiple evolutionary paths to C4 photosynthesis |journal= ] |volume= 2 |pages= e00961 |doi= 10.7554/eLife.00961 |doi-access= free |pmc= 3786385 |pmid= 24082995 }}</ref>


Plants that use the ] process chemically fix carbon dioxide in the ] of the ] by adding it to the three-carbon molecule ] (PEP), a reaction ] by an ] called ], creating the four-carbon organic acid ]. Oxaloacetic acid or ] synthesized by this process is then ] to specialized ] cells where the enzyme ] and other Calvin cycle enzymes are located, and where {{co2}} released by ] of the four-carbon acids is then fixed by RuBisCO activity to the three-carbon ]s. The physical separation of RuBisCO from the oxygen-generating light reactions reduces photorespiration and increases {{co2}} fixation and, thus, the ] of the ].<ref>{{cite book |vauthors= Taiz L, Geiger E |year= 2006 |title= Plant Physiology |edition= 4th |publisher= ] |isbn= 978-0-87893-856-8 |url= https://archive.org/details/plantphysiology0000taiz_y5k4 |url-access= registration }}</ref> ] can produce more sugar than ] in conditions of high light and ]. Many important ] are {{c4}} plants, including ], ], ], and ]. Plants that do not use PEP-carboxylase in carbon fixation are called C<sub>3</sub> plants because the primary ], catalyzed by RuBisCO, produces the three-carbon 3-phosphoglyceric acids directly in the ]. Over 90% of plants use {{c3}} carbon fixation, compared to 3% that use {{c4}} carbon fixation;<ref>{{cite book |vauthors= Monson RK, Sage RF |title= C<sub>4</sub> plant biology |publisher= ] |location=Boston |year=1999 |pages= 551–580 |chapter= The Taxonomic Distribution of {{chem|C|4}} Photosynthesis |isbn= 978-0-12-614440-6 |chapter-url= https://books.google.com/books?id=H7Wv9ZImW-QC&pg=PA551 |access-date= 2019-04-17 |archive-date= 2023-01-19 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20230119181847/https://books.google.com/books?id=H7Wv9ZImW-QC&pg=PA551 |url-status= live }}</ref> however, the evolution of {{c4}} in over sixty plant lineages makes it a striking example of ].<ref name="Williams-2013"/> ], which involves carbon-concentration by selective breakdown of photorespiratory glycine, is both an evolutionary precursor to {{c4}} and a useful ] in its own right.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Lundgren MR |date= December 2020 |title= C 2 photosynthesis: a promising route towards crop improvement? |journal= New Phytologist |volume= 228 |issue= 6 |pages= 1734–1740 |doi= 10.1111/nph.16494 |doi-access= free |pmid= 32080851 }}</ref>


], such as ] and most ], also use PEP carboxylase to capture carbon dioxide in a process called ] (CAM). In contrast to {{c4}} metabolism, which ''spatially'' separates the {{co2}} fixation to PEP from the Calvin cycle, CAM ''temporally'' separates these two processes. CAM plants have a different ] from {{c3}} plants, and fix the {{co2}} at night, when their stomata are open. CAM plants store the {{co2}} mostly in the form of ] via carboxylation of ] to ], which is then reduced to malate. Decarboxylation of malate during the day releases {{co2}} inside the leaves, thus allowing carbon fixation to 3-phosphoglycerate by RuBisCO. CAM is used by 16,000 ] of plants.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Dodd AN, Borland AM, Haslam RP, Griffiths H, Maxwell K |date= April 2002 |title= Crassulacean acid metabolism: plastic, fantastic |journal= ] |volume= 53 |issue= 369 |pages= 569–580 |doi= 10.1093/jexbot/53.369.569 |doi-access= free |pmid= 11886877 }}</ref>
] equation: Δ<sub>r</sub>G = Δ<sub>r</sub>H – TΔ<sub>r</sub>S... where ΔH is enthalpy, ΔS is entropy, and T is temperature.


]-accumulating plants, such as '']'' and ''],'' show a variation of photosynthesis where calcium oxalate ] function as dynamic ], supplying carbon dioxide (CO<sub>2</sub>) to photosynthetic cells when stomata are partially or totally closed. This process was named ]. Under ] conditions (e.g., ]), ] released from calcium oxalate crystals is converted to CO<sub>2</sub> by an ] enzyme, and the produced CO<sub>2</sub> can support the ] reactions. Reactive ] (H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub>), the ] of oxalate oxidase reaction, can be ] by ]. Alarm photosynthesis represents a photosynthetic variant to be added to the well-known C4 and CAM pathways. However, alarm photosynthesis, in contrast to these pathways, operates as a biochemical pump that collects carbon from the organ interior (or from the ]) and not from the atmosphere.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Tooulakou G, Giannopoulos A, Nikolopoulos D, Bresta P, Dotsika E, Orkoula MG, Kontoyannis CG, Fasseas C, Liakopoulos G, Klapa MI, Karabourniotis G |display-authors= 6 |date= August 2016 |title= Alarm Photosynthesis: Calcium Oxalate Crystals as an Internal CO2 Source in Plants |journal= Plant Physiology |volume= 171 |issue= 4 |pages= 2577–2585 |doi= 10.1104/pp.16.00111 |pmc= 4972262 |pmid= 27261065 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Gómez-Espinoza O, González-Ramírez D, Bresta P, Karabourniotis G, Bravo LA | title=Decomposition of Calcium Oxalate Crystals in ''Colobanthus quitensis'' under CO<sub>2</sub> Limiting Conditions |journal= Plants |volume= 9 |issue= 10 |pages= 1307 | date= October 2020 |doi= 10.3390/plants9101307 |doi-access= free |pmc= 7600318 |pmid= 33023238 }}</ref>
] equation: Δ<sub>t</sub>G × Δ<super>l</sub>H – SΔ<sub>n<super>12</sub>S = n<sub>x</sub></super>±12.332


====In water====
Past experiments have shown that the total energy produced by photosynthesis is 112 kcal/mol. However in the experiment, the free energy due to light was 120 kcal/mol. An overall loss of 8 kcal/mol was due to entropy, as described by Gibbs equation (Gonindjee). In other words, since the usable energy of the system is related directly to the entropy and temperature of the system, a smaller amount of ] is available for conversion into usable forms of energy (including mechanical and chemical) when entropy is great (Rabinowitch). This concept relates back to the ] in that an increase in entropy is needed to convert light energy into energy suitable for the plant.
] possess ]s, which increase the concentration of {{co2}} around RuBisCO to increase the rate of photosynthesis. An enzyme, ], located within the carboxysome, releases CO<sub>2</sub> from dissolved ] (HCO{{su|b=3|p=−}}). Before the CO<sub>2</sub> can diffuse out<!-- of what? -->, RuBisCO concentrated within the carboxysome quickly sponges it up. HCO{{su|b=3|p=−}} ions are made from CO<sub>2</sub> outside the cell by another carbonic anhydrase and are actively pumped into the cell by a membrane protein. They cannot cross the membrane as they are charged, and within the cytosol they turn back into CO<sub>2</sub> very slowly without the help of carbonic anhydrase. This causes the HCO{{su|b=3|p=−}} ions to accumulate within the cell from where they diffuse into the carboxysomes.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Badger MR, Price GD |date= February 2003 |title= CO2 concentrating mechanisms in cyanobacteria: molecular components, their diversity and evolution |journal= ] |volume= 54 |issue= 383 |pages= 609–622 |doi= 10.1093/jxb/erg076 |doi-access= free |pmid= 12554704 }}</ref> ]s in ] and ]s also act to concentrate {{co2}} around RuBisCO.<ref>{{Cite journal |vauthors=Badger MR, Andrews JT, Whitney SM, Ludwig M, Yellowlees DC, Leggat W, Price GD |year= 1998 |title= The diversity and coevolution of Rubisco, plastids, pyrenoids, and chloroplast-based CO<sub>2</sub>-concentrating mechanisms in algae |journal= ] |volume= 76 |issue= 6 |pages= 1052–1071 |doi= 10.1139/b98-074 }}</ref>


==Order and kinetics==
Overall, in conjunction with the ] nature of the photosynthesis equation, and the interrelationships between entropy and enthalpy, energy in a usable form will be produced by the photosynthesizing green plant.
The overall ] of photosynthesis takes place in four stages:<ref name="McGraw-Hill-2007"/>
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Stage !! Event
!Site!! Time scale
|-
| 1 || ] in ]
| rowspan="3" |] in the ]s|| ] to ]
|-
| 2 || ] in ] || ] to ]
|-
| 3 || ] and ]|| ] to ]
|-
| 4 || ] and export of stable ]
|] of the chloroplasts and the cell ]|| ] to ]
|}


==Efficiency==
==Factors affecting photosynthesis==
{{Main|Photosynthetic efficiency}}
]s usually ] with a ] of 3–6%.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.fao.org/docrep/w7241e/w7241e05.htm#1.2.1%20photosynthetic%20efficiency |title= Chapter 1 – Biological energy production |vauthors= Miyamoto K |work= Renewable biological systems for alternative sustainable energy production (FAO Agricultural Services Bulletin – 128) |publisher= Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations |access-date= 2009-01-04 |df=dmy-all |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130907040322/http://www.fao.org/docrep/w7241e/w7241e05.htm#1.2.1%20photosynthetic%20efficiency |archive-date= 2013-09-07 |url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="Ehrenberg-2017">{{cite journal |vauthors= Ehrenberg R |date= 2017-12-15 |title= The photosynthesis fix |journal= Knowable Magazine |publisher= Annual Reviews |url= https://www.knowablemagazine.org/article/sustainability/2017/photosynthesis-fix |doi= 10.1146/knowable-121917-115502 |access-date= 2018-04-03 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20220407053057/https://knowablemagazine.org/article/sustainability/2017/photosynthesis-fix |archive-date= 2022-04-07 |url-status=live |doi-access=free }}</ref>
Absorbed light that is unconverted is ] primarily as ], with a small ] (1–2%) reemitted as ] at longer (redder) ]s. This fact allows ] of the ] of photosynthesis by using chlorophyll ]s.<ref name="Maxwell-2000">{{cite journal |vauthors= Maxwell K, Johnson GN |date= April 2000 |title= Chlorophyll fluorescence – a practical guide |journal= Journal of Experimental Botany |volume= 51 |issue= 345 |pages= 659–668 |doi= 10.1093/jexbot/51.345.659 |doi-access= free |pmid= 10938857 }}</ref>


Actual plants' photosynthetic efficiency varies with the ] being converted, ], ], and proportion of ], and can vary from 0.1% to 8%.<ref>{{cite web |vauthors= Govindjee, Rajni |title= What is Photosynthesis? |publisher= Biology at Illinois |url= http://www.life.illinois.edu/govindjee/whatisit.htm |access-date= 2014-04-17 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20140527074801/http://www.life.illinois.edu/govindjee/whatisit.htm |archive-date= 2014-05-27 |url-status= dead |df= dmy-all }}</ref> By comparison, ] convert light into ] at an efficiency of approximately 6–20% for ] panels, and above 40% in ] devices.
There are three main factors affecting photosynthesis and several corollary factors. The three main are:
]s are studying photosynthesis in hopes of developing plants with increased ].<ref name="Ehrenberg-2017"/>


The efficiency of both light and dark reactions can be measured, but the relationship between the two can be complex. For example, the ] creates ] and ] energy ]s, which ] can use for ] or ].<ref>{{cite book |vauthors= Rosenqvist E, van Kooten O |year= 2006 |chapter= Chapter 2: Chlorophyll Fluorescence: A General Description and Nomenclature |veditors= DeEll JA, Toivonen PM |title= Practical Applications of Chlorophyll Fluorescence in Plant Biology |publisher= Kluwer Academic Publishers |location= Dordrecht, the Netherlands |pages= 39–78 |isbn= 9781461504153 |chapter-url= https://books.google.com/books?id=8vfxBwAAQBAJ&pg=PA39 |access-date= 2019-04-17 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20230119181849/https://books.google.com/books?id=8vfxBwAAQBAJ&pg=PA39 |archive-date= 2023-01-19 |url-status= live }}</ref> ]s may also flow to other electron sinks.<ref>{{cite book |vauthors= Baker NR, Oxborough K |year= 2004 |chapter= Chapter 3: Chlorophyll fluorescence as a probe of photosynthetic productivity |veditors= Papaqeorgiou G, Govindjee |title= Chlorophylla Fluorescence a Signature of Photosynthesis |location=Dordrecht, The Netherlands |publisher= Springer |pages=66–79 |chapter-url= https://books.google.com/books?id=wDSywgEACAAJ&pg=PA66 |access-date= 2019-04-17 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20230119181850/https://books.google.com/books?id=wDSywgEACAAJ&pg=PA66 |archive-date= 2023-01-19 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Flexas J, Escalnona JM, Medrano H |date= January 1999 |title= Water stress induces different levels of photosynthesis and electron transport rate regulation in grapevines |journal= Plant, Cell and Environment |volume= 22 |issue= 1 |pages= 39–48 |doi= 10.1046/j.1365-3040.1999.00371.x |doi-access= free }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Fryer MJ, Andrews JR, Oxborough K, Blowers DA, Baker NR |year= 1998 |title= Relationship between CO{{sub|2}} assimilation, photosynthetic electron transport, and active O{{sub|2}} metabolism in leaves of maize in the field during periods of low temperature |journal= Plant Physiology |volume= 116 |issue= 2 |pages= 571–580 |doi= 10.1104/pp.116.2.571 |pmc= 35114 |pmid= 9490760 }}</ref> For this reason, it is not uncommon for ]s to differentiate between work done under ].<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Earl H, Said Ennahli S |year= 2004 |title= Estimating photosynthetic electron transport via chlorophyll fluorometry without Photosystem II light saturation |journal= Photosynthesis Research |volume= 82 |issue= 2 |pages= 177–186 |bibcode= 2004PhoRe..82..177E |doi= 10.1007/s11120-004-1454-3 |pmid= 16151873 |s2cid= 291238 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Genty B, Briantais J, Baker NR |year= 1989 |title= The relationship between the quantum yield of photosynthetic electron transport and quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence |journal= Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - General Subjects |volume= 990 |issue= 1 |pages= 87–92 |doi= 10.1016/s0304-4165(89)80016-9 }}</ref><ref name="Baker-2008">{{cite journal |vauthors= Baker NR |year= 2008 |title= Chlorophyll fluorescence: A probe of photosynthesis ''in vivo'' |journal= Annual Review of Plant Biology |volume= 59 |pages= 89–113 |doi= 10.1146/annurev.arplant.59.032607.092759 |pmid= 18444897 |s2cid= 31451852 }}</ref>
* Light ] and ]
* ] ]
* ]


] of ] can measure the light reaction, and ]s can measure the ].<ref name="Bernacchi-2002">{{cite journal |vauthors= Bernacchi CJ, Portis AR, Nakano H, von Caemmerer S, Long SP |year= 2002 |title= Temperature response of mesophyll conductance. Implications for the determination of Rubisco enzyme kinetics and for limitations to photosynthesis in vivo |journal= Plant Physiology |volume= 130 |issue= 4 |pages= 1992–1998 |doi= 10.1104/pp.008250 |pmc= 166710 |pmid= 12481082 }}</ref> An integrated chlorophyll ] and ] can investigate both light and dark reactions when researchers use the two separate ] together.<ref name="Ribas-Carbo-2010">{{cite journal |vauthors= Ribas-Carbo M, Flexas J, Robinson SA, Tcherkez GG |year= 2010 |title=''In vivo'' measurement of plant respiration |journal= University of Wollongong Research Online}}</ref> Infrared gas analyzers and some ] are sensitive enough to measure the ] of ] and of ]H<sub>2</sub>O using ]. CO<sub>2</sub> is commonly measured in {{Abbr|μmols|micromoles}}/(]/]), ] million, or volume per million; and ] is commonly measured in {{Abbr|mmols|millimole}}/(m<sup>2</sup>/s) or in {{Abbr|mbars|millibars}}. By measuring ], ΔH<sub>2</sub>O, leaf temperature, ], leaf area, and ] (PAR), it becomes possible to estimate, "A" or carbon assimilation, "E" or ], "gs" or ], and "Ci" or intracellular CO<sub>2</sub>.<ref name="Long-2003">{{cite journal |vauthors= Long SP, Bernacchi CJ |year= 2003 |title= Gas exchange measurements, what can they tell us about the underlying limitations to photosynthesis? Procedures and sources of error |journal= Journal of Experimental Botany |volume= 54 |issue= 392 |pages= 2393–2401 |doi= 10.1093/jxb/erg262 |doi-access=free |pmid= 14512377 }}</ref> However, it is more common to use chlorophyll fluorescence for ], where appropriate, because the most commonly used parameters ] and ] can be measured in a few seconds, allowing the investigation of larger plant populations.<ref name="Baker-2008"/>
=== Light intensity (Irradiance), wavelength and temperature ===


] that offer control of CO<sub>2</sub> levels, above and below ], allow the common practice of measurement of A/Ci curves, at different CO<sub>2</sub> levels, to characterize a plant's photosynthetic response.<ref name="Long-2003"/>
In the early 1900s ] investigated the effects of light intensity (]) and temperature on the rate of photosynthesis. At constant temperature the rate of photosynthesis varies with irradiance, initially increasing as the irradiance increases. However at higher irradiance this relationship no longer holds and the rate of photosynthesis reaches a plateau. The effect on the rate of photosynthesis of varying the temperature at constant irradiance can be seen in image to the left. At high irradiance the rate of photosynthesis increases as the temperature is increased over a limited range. At low irradiance, increasing the temperature has little effect on the rate of photosynthesis. These two experiments illustrate vital points: firstly, from ] it is known that ] reactions are not generally affected by ]. However, these experiments clearly show that temperature affects the rate of photosynthesis, so there must be two sets of reactions in the full process of photosynthesis. These are of course the ] stage and the ] stage. Secondly, Blackman's experiments illustrate the concept of ]. Another limiting factor is the wavelength of light. Cyanobacteria which reside several metres underwater cannot receive the correct wavelengths required to cause photoinduced charge separation in conventional photosynthetic pigments. To combat this problem a series of proteins with different flourescent pigments surround the reaction centre. This unit is called a ].


Integrated chlorophyll fluorometer – gas exchange systems allow a more ] measure of photosynthetic response and mechanisms.<ref name="Bernacchi-2002"/><ref name="Ribas-Carbo-2010"/> While standard gas exchange photosynthesis systems can measure Ci, or substomatal CO<sub>2</sub> levels, the addition of integrated chlorophyll fluorescence measurements allows a more precise measurement of C<sub>C,</sub> the estimation of CO<sub>2</sub> concentration at the site of ] in the chloroplast, to replace Ci.<ref name="Ribas-Carbo-2010"/><ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Bernacchi CJ, Portis AR, Nakano H, von Caemmerer S, Long SP |year= 2002 |title= Temperature response of nesophyll conductance. Implications for the determination of Rubisco enzyme kinetics and for limitations to photosynthesis ''in vivo'' |journal= Plant Physiology |volume= 130 |issue= 4 |pages= 1992–1998 |doi= 10.1104/pp.008250 |pmc= 166710 |pmid= 12481082 }}</ref> CO<sub>2</sub> concentration in the chloroplast becomes possible to estimate with the measurement of mesophyll conductance or g<sub>m</sub> using an integrated system.<ref name="Bernacchi-2002"/><ref name="Ribas-Carbo-2010"/><ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Yin X, Struik PC |year= 2009 |title= Theoretical reconsiderations when estimating the mesophyll conductanceto CO{{sub|2}} diffusion in leaves of C3 plants by analysis of combined gas exchange and chlorophyll fluorescence measurements |journal= Plant, Cell and Environment |volume= 32 |issue= 11 |pages= 1513–1524 |doi= 10.1111/j.1365-3040.2009.02016.x |doi-access= free |pmid= 19558403 }}</ref>
=== Carbon dioxide ===
{{section-stub}}
As carbon dioxide concentrations rise, the rate at which sugars are made by the light-independent reactions increases until limited by other factors. One reason for this is that ], the enzyme fixing the carbon dioxide in the light-dependent reactions, has a binding affinity for both carbon dioxide and oxygen. Thus, an increase in the concentration of carbon dioxide increases the probability of RuBisCO fixing carbon dioxide instead of oxygen.


Photosynthesis measurement systems are not designed to directly measure the amount of light the leaf absorbs, but analysis of ], ]- and P515-absorbance, and ] measurements reveal detailed information about, e.g., the ]s, ] and the CO<sub>2</sub> assimilation rates. With some instruments, even wavelength dependency of the photosynthetic efficiency can be ].<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Schreiber U, Klughammer C, Kolbowski J |year= 2012 |title= Assessment of wavelength-dependent parameters of photosynthetic electron transport with a new type of multi-color PAM chlorophyll fluorometer |journal= Photosynthesis Research |volume= 113 |issue= 1–3 |pages= 127–144 |bibcode= 2012PhoRe.113..127S |doi= 10.1007/s11120-012-9758-1 |pmc= 3430841 |pmid= 22729479 }}</ref>
A reduced RuBisCO oxygenase activity is advantageous to plants for several reasons.
# One product of oxygenase activity is ] (2 carbon) instead of ] (3 carbon). Phosphoglycolate cannot be metabolised by the Calvin cycle and represents carbon lost from the cycle. A high oxygenase activity, therefore, drains the sugars that are required to recycle ribulose 5-bisphosphate and for the continuation of the Calvin cycle.
# Phosphoglycolate is quickly metabolised to glycolate that is toxic to a plant at a high concentration; it inhibits photosynthesis.
# Salvaging glycolate is an energetically expensive process that uses the glycolate pathway and only 75% of the carbon is returned to the Calvin cycle as 3-phosphoglycerate.


A ] known as ] increases the efficiency of the energy transport of light significantly. In the photosynthetic cell of an ], ], or plant, there are light-sensitive molecules called ]s arranged in an antenna-shaped structure called a photocomplex. When a ] is absorbed by a chromophore, it is converted into a ] referred to as an ], which jumps from chromophore to chromophore towards the reaction center of the photocomplex, a collection of molecules that traps its energy in a chemical form accessible to the cell's metabolism. The exciton's wave properties enable it to cover a wider area and try out several possible paths simultaneously, allowing it to instantaneously "choose" the most efficient route, where it will have the highest probability of arriving at its destination in the minimum possible time.
::A highly simplified summary is:


Because that quantum walking takes place at temperatures far higher than quantum phenomena usually occur, it is only possible over very short distances. Obstacles in the form of destructive interference cause the particle to lose its wave properties for an instant before it regains them once again after it is freed from its locked position through a classic "hop". The movement of the electron towards the photo center is therefore covered in a series of conventional hops and quantum walks.<ref>{{cite news |vauthors= Palmer J |date= 21 June 2013 |title= Plants 'seen doing quantum physics' |journal= BBC News |url= https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-22996054 |access-date= 21 June 2018 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20181003013809/https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-22996054 |archive-date= 3 October 2018 |url-status= live }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |vauthors= Lloyd S |date= 10 March 2014 |title= Quantum Biology: Better living through quantum mechanics |series= The Nature of Reality |publisher= Nova: PBS Online; WGBH Boston |url= https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/blogs/physics/2014/03/quantum-life/ |access-date= 8 September 2017 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20170703071034/http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/blogs/physics/2014/03/quantum-life/ |archive-date= 3 July 2017 |url-status= live }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Hildner R, Brinks D, Nieder JB, Cogdell RJ, van Hulst NF |date= June 2013 |title= Quantum coherent energy transfer over varying pathways in single light-harvesting complexes |journal= Science |volume= 340 |issue= 6139 |pages= 1448–1451 |bibcode= 2013Sci...340.1448H |doi= 10.1126/science.1235820 |pmid= 23788794 |s2cid= 25760719 }}</ref>
:::2 glycolate + ATP &rarr; 3-phophoglycerate + carbon dioxide + ADP +NH<sub>3</sub>


==Evolution==
The salvaging pathway for the products of RuBisCO oxygenase activity is more commonly known as ] since it is characterised by light dependent oxygen consumption and the release of carbon dioxide.
{{main|Evolution of photosynthesis}}
{{Life timeline}}
]s of what are thought to be ] photosynthetic ]s have been dated at 3.4 billion years old.<ref>{{cite magazine |vauthors= Davis K |date= 2 October 2004 |title= Photosynthesis got a really early start |journal= New Scientist |url= https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg18424671.600-photosynthesis-got-a-really-early-start.html |access-date= 8 September 2017 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20150501021507/http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg18424671.600-photosynthesis-got-a-really-early-start.html |archive-date= 1 May 2015 |url-status= live }}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine |vauthors= Hooper R |date= 19 August 2006 |title= Revealing the dawn of photosynthesis |journal= New Scientist |url= https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg19125654.200-revealing-the-dawn-of-photosynthesis.html |access-date= 8 September 2017 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20150524053125/http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg19125654.200-revealing-the-dawn-of-photosynthesis.html |archive-date= 24 May 2015 |url-status= live }}</ref> More recent ] also suggest that photosynthesis may have begun about 3.4 billion years ago,<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Cardona T |date= March 2018 |title= Early Archean origin of heterodimeric Photosystem I |journal= Heliyon |volume= 4 |issue= 3 |pages= e00548 |bibcode= 2018Heliy...400548C |doi= 10.1016/j.heliyon.2018.e00548 |doi-access= free |pmc= 5857716 |pmid= 29560463 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |vauthors= Howard V |date= 7 March 2018 |title= Photosynthesis Originated A Billion Years Earlier Than We Thought, Study Shows |work= ] |url= https://www.astrobio.net/also-in-news/photosynthesis-originated-billion-years-earlier-thought-study-shows/ |access-date= 23 March 2018 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20201001223438/https://www.astrobio.net/also-in-news/photosynthesis-originated-billion-years-earlier-thought-study-shows/ |archive-date= October 1, 2020 |url-status= dead }}</ref> though the first direct ] of photosynthesis comes from ] preserved in 1.75-billion-year-old ]s.<ref>{{cite journal |last1= Demoulin |first1= Catherine F. |last2= Lara |first2= Yannick J. |last3= Lambion |first3= Alexandre |last4= Javaux |first4= Emmanuelle J. |date= 2024 |title= Oldest thylakoids in fossil cells directly evidence oxygenic photosynthesis |journal= Nature |volume= 625 |issue= 7995 |pages= 529–534 |bibcode= 2024Natur.625..529D |doi= 10.1038/s41586-023-06896-7 |pmid= 38172638 |s2cid= 266752333 |url= https://orbi.uliege.be/bitstream/2268/312062/1/Oldest_thylakoids.docx }}</ref>


] is the main source of ] in the ], and its earliest appearance is sometimes referred to as the ]. ] evidence suggests that oxygenic photosynthesis, such as that in ], became important during the ] era around two billion years ago. Modern photosynthesis in ]s and most photosynthetic ]s is oxygenic, using ] as an ], which is ] to molecular oxygen in the ].
=== Corollary factors ===
{{section-stub}}
* ] ] ]
* ] ]]]
* ] ] ]
* ] ] ] ] ] ] ]


===Symbiosis and the origin of chloroplasts===
Pengin
]'')]]


Several groups of ]s have formed ] relationships with photosynthetic ]. These are most common in ]s, ]s, and ]s. ]s presume that this is due to the particularly simple ]s and large ]s of these animals compared to their ]s.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Venn AA, Loram JE, Douglas AE |title= Photosynthetic symbioses in animals |journal= Journal of Experimental Botany |volume= 59 |issue= 5 |pages= 1069–1080 |year= 2008 |pmid= 18267943 |doi= 10.1093/jxb/erm328 |doi-access= free }}</ref> In addition, a few marine ], such as '']'' and ''],'' also maintain a symbiotic relationship with ]s they capture from the algae in ] and then store in their bodies (see ]). This allows the mollusks to survive solely by photosynthesis for several months at a time.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Rumpho ME, Summer EJ, Manhart JR |date= May 2000 |title= Solar-powered sea slugs. Mollusc/algal chloroplast symbiosis |journal= Plant Physiology |volume= 123 |issue= 1 |pages= 29–38 |doi= 10.1104/pp.123.1.29 |pmc= 1539252 |pmid= 10806222 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |vauthors= Muscatine L, Greene RW |year= 1973 |title= Chloroplasts and algae as symbionts in molluscs |journal= International Review of Cytology |volume= 36 |pages= 137–169 |isbn= 978-0-12-364336-0 |pmid= 4587388 |doi= 10.1016/S0074-7696(08)60217-X }}</ref> Some of the ]s from the plant ] have even been transferred to the ]s, so that the chloroplasts can be supplied with ]s they need to survive.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Rumpho ME, Worful JM, Lee J, Kannan K, Tyler MS, Bhattacharya D, Moustafa A, Manhart JR |date= November 2008 |title= Horizontal gene transfer of the algal nuclear gene psbO to the photosynthetic sea slug Elysia chlorotica |journal= Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America |volume= 105 |issue= 46 |pages= 17867–17871 |bibcode= 2008PNAS..10517867R |doi= 10.1073/pnas.0804968105 |doi-access= free |pmc= 2584685 |pmid= 19004808 }}</ref>
==In detail==


An even closer form of symbiosis may explain the origin of chloroplasts. Chloroplasts have many similarities with photosynthetic ], including a circular ], prokaryotic-type ], and similar ].<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Douglas SE |date= December 1998 |title= Plastid evolution: origins, diversity, trends |journal= Current Opinion in Genetics & Development |volume= 8 |issue= 6 |pages= 655–661 |doi= 10.1016/S0959-437X(98)80033-6 |pmid= 9914199 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |vauthors=Reyes-Prieto A, Weber AP, Bhattacharya D |year=2007 |title=The origin and establishment of the plastid in algae and plants |journal=Annual Review of Genetics |volume=41 |pages=147–168 |doi=10.1146/annurev.genet.41.110306.130134 |pmid=17600460 |s2cid=8966320}}</ref> The ] suggests that photosynthetic bacteria were acquired (by ]) by early ] cells to form the first plant cells. Therefore, chloroplasts may be photosynthetic bacteria that adapted to life inside plant cells. Like ], chloroplasts possess their own ], separate from the ] of their plant host cells and the genes in this chloroplast DNA resemble those found in ].<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Raven JA, Allen JF |year= 2003 |title= Genomics and chloroplast evolution: what did cyanobacteria do for plants? |journal= Genome Biology |volume= 4 |issue= 3 |page= 209 |doi= 10.1186/gb-2003-4-3-209 |doi-access= free |pmc= 153454 |pmid= 12620099 }}</ref> DNA in chloroplasts codes for ] proteins such as those found in the photosynthetic reaction centers. The ] proposes that this co-location of genes with their gene products is required for redox regulation of ], and accounts for the persistence of DNA in bioenergetic ]s.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Allen JF |date= December 2017 |title= The CoRR hypothesis for genes in organelles |journal= Journal of Theoretical Biology |volume= 434 |pages= 50–57 |bibcode= 2017JThBi.434...50A |doi= 10.1016/j.jtbi.2017.04.008 |doi-access= free |pmid= 28408315 }}</ref>
Metabolic pathways involved in photosynthesis:
* ]
* ]


===Photosynthetic eukaryotic lineages===
==References==
Symbiotic and ] organisms excluded:


*The ]s and the ] and ]—clade ] (]- and ])
Govindjee. ''Bioenergetics of Photosynthesis''. New York: Academic Press, 1975.
*The ]—clade ] (unicellular)
*The ]s—clade ] (unicellular)
*The ]s and ] in the superphylum ], and ] in the phylum ]—clade ] (unicellular)
*The ]—clade ] (uni- and multicellular)
*The ]s and three ] of ] in the phylum ]—clade ] (unicellular)
*The ]s—clade ] (unicellular)


Except for the euglenids, which are found within the ], all of these belong to the ]. Archaeplastida and the photosynthetic Paulinella got their plastids, which are surrounded by two membranes, through primary ] in two separate events, by engulfing a cyanobacterium. The plastids in all the other groups have either a red or green algal origin, and are referred to as the "red lineages" and the "green lineages". The only known exception is the ciliate ], which in addition to its plastids that originated from green algae also has a ] as symbiont. In dinoflagellates and euglenids the plastids are surrounded by three membranes, and in the remaining lines by four. A ], remnants of the original algal nucleus located between the inner and outer membranes of the plastid, is present in the cryptophytes (from a red alga) and chlorarachniophytes (from a green alga).<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Keeling PJ |date= March 2010 |title= The endosymbiotic origin, diversification and fate of plastids |journal= Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences |volume= 365 |issue= 1541 |pages= 729–748 |doi= 10.1098/rstb.2009.0103 |pmc= 2817223 |pmid= 20124341 }}</ref>
Gregory, R.P.F. ''Biochemistry of Photosynthesis''. Belfast: Universities Press, 1971.
Some dinoflagellates that lost their photosynthetic ability later regained it again through new endosymbiotic events with different algae.
While able to perform photosynthesis, many of these eukaryotic groups are ]s and practice ]y to various degrees.


===Photosynthetic prokaryotic lineages===
Rabinowitch, Eugene and Govindjee. ''Photosynthesis''. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1969.
Early photosynthetic systems, such as those in ] and ] and ] and ], are thought to have been ], and used various other molecules than water as ]s. Green and purple sulfur bacteria are thought to have used ] and ] as electron donors. Green nonsulfur bacteria used various ] and other ]s as electron donors. Purple nonsulfur bacteria used a variety of nonspecific organic molecules. The use of these molecules is consistent with the geological evidence that Earth's early atmosphere was highly ] at ].<ref>{{cite book |vauthors= Gale J |date= 2009 |title= Astrobiology of Earth: The emergence, evolution and future of life on a planet in turmoil |publisher= Oxford University Press |isbn= 978-0-19-154835-2 |pages= 112–113 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=64zn0nxDVUYC&pg=PA112 |access-date= 2019-04-17 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20230119181850/https://books.google.com/books?id=64zn0nxDVUYC&pg=PA112 |archive-date= 2023-01-19 |url-status= live }}</ref>


With a possible exception of ], photosynthesis is not found in ].<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Liu R, Cai R, Zhang J, Sun C |title= Heimdallarchaeota harness light energy through photosynthesis. |journal= bioRxiv |date= February 2020 |doi= 10.1101/2020.02.20.957134 |s2cid= 213816522 }}</ref> ] are phototrophic and can absorb energy from the sun, but do not harvest carbon from the atmosphere and are therefore not photosynthetic.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= DasSarma S, Schwieterman EW |date= June 2021 |title= Early evolution of purple retinal pigments on Earth and implications for exoplanet biosignatures |journal= International Journal of Astrobiology |volume= 20 |issue= 3 |pages= 241–250 |arxiv= 1810.05150 |bibcode= 2021IJAsB..20..241D |doi= 10.1017/S1473550418000423 |doi-access= free |s2cid= 119341330 }} {{lay source |template=cite news |url= https://www.cbc.ca/radio/quirks/oct-27-2018-neanderthal-nursing-antarctica-s-singing-snows-fish-and-hook-injuries-a-1.4878288/purple-reign-life-on-earth-might-once-have-been-dominated-by-purple-microorganisms-1.4878298 |title= Purple reign: life on Earth might once have been dominated by purple microorganisms |date= 26 October 2018 |work= CBC/Radio-Canada }}</ref> Instead of chlorophyll they use rhodopsins, which convert light-energy to ion gradients but cannot mediate electron transfer reactions.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Hamilton TL |date= August 2019 |title= The trouble with oxygen: The ecophysiology of extant phototrophs and implications for the evolution of oxygenic photosynthesis |journal= Free Radical Biology & Medicine |volume= 140 |pages= 233–249 |doi= 10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2019.05.003 |doi-access= free |pmid= 31078729 |s2cid= 153285864 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Sharma AK, Walsh DA, Bapteste E, Rodriguez-Valera F, Ford Doolittle W, Papke RT |date= May 2007 |title= Evolution of rhodopsin ion pumps in haloarchaea |journal= BMC Evolutionary Biology |volume= 7 |issue= 1 |pages= 79 |bibcode= 2007BMCEE...7...79S |doi= 10.1186/1471-2148-7-79 |doi-access= free |pmc= 1885257 |pmid= 17511874 }}</ref>
Campbell, N., & Reece, J. ''Biology'' 7th ed. San Francisco: Benjamin Cummings., 2005


In ] eight photosynthetic lineages are currently known:<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Xiong J |title= Photosynthesis: what color was its origin? |journal= Genome Biology |volume= 7 |issue= 12 |pages= 245 |date= 2006 |pmid= 17210067 |pmc= 1794423 |doi= 10.1186/gb-2006-7-12-245 |doi-access= free }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Paoli L, Ruscheweyh HJ, Forneris CC, Hubrich F, Kautsar S, Bhushan A, Lotti A, Clayssen Q, Salazar G, Milanese A, Carlström CI, Papadopoulou C, Gehrig D, Karasikov M, Mustafa H, Larralde M, Carroll LM, Sánchez P, Zayed AA, Cronin DR, Acinas SG, Bork P, Bowler C, Delmont TO, Gasol JM, Gossert AD, Kahles A, Sullivan MB, Wincker P, Zeller G, Robinson SL, Piel J, Sunagawa S |display-authors= 6 |date= July 2022 |title= Biosynthetic potential of the global ocean microbiome |journal= Nature |volume= 607 |issue= 7917 |pages= 111–118 |doi= 10.1038/s43705-022-00201-9 |doi-access= free |pmc= 9758169 |pmid= 35732736 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= He Z, Ferlez B, Kurashov V, Tank M, Golbeck JH, Bryant DA |title= Reaction centers of the thermophilic microaerophile, Chloracidobacterium thermophilum (Acidobacteria) I: biochemical and biophysical characterization |journal= Photosynthesis Research |volume= 142 |issue= 1 |pages= 87–103 |date= October 2019 |pmid= 31161318 |doi= 10.1007/s11120-019-00650-9 |bibcode= 2019PhoRe.142...87H |s2cid= 254941681 |url= https://scholarworks.montana.edu/xmlui/handle/1/15841 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Zeng Y, Feng F, Medová H, Dean J, Koblížek M |date= May 2014 |title= Functional type 2 photosynthetic reaction centers found in the rare bacterial phylum Gemmatimonadetes |journal= Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America |volume= 111 |issue= 21 |pages= 7795–7800 |bibcode= 2014PNAS..111.7795Z |doi= 10.1073/pnas.1400295111 |doi-access= free |pmc= 4040607 |pmid= 24821787 }}</ref>
==See also==
*]
*]
*]
*]


*], the only prokaryotes performing oxygenic photosynthesis and the only prokaryotes that contain two types of photosystems (type I (RCI), also known as Fe-S type, and type II (RCII), also known as quinone type). The seven remaining prokaryotes have ] and use versions of either type I or type II.
==External links==
*] (green sulfur bacteria) Type I
*
*] Type I
*
*] Type I
*
*] (purple sulfur bacteria and purple non-sulfur bacteria) Type II (see: ])
*
*] (green non-sulfur bacteria) Type II
*] Type II
*Eremiobacterota Type II


===Cyanobacteria and the evolution of photosynthesis===
]
The biochemical capacity to use water as the source for electrons in photosynthesis evolved once, in a ] of extant ] (formerly called blue-green algae). The geological record indicates that this transforming event took place early in Earth's history, at least 2450–2320 million years ago (Ma), and, it is speculated, much earlier.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Tomitani A, Knoll AH, Cavanaugh CM, Ohno T |date= April 2006 |title= The evolutionary diversification of cyanobacteria: molecular-phylogenetic and paleontological perspectives |journal= Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America |volume= 103 |issue= 14 |pages= 5442–5447 |bibcode= 2006PNAS..103.5442T |doi= 10.1073/pnas.0600999103 |doi-access= free |pmc= 1459374 |pmid= 16569695 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/bacteria/cyanofr.html |title= Cyanobacteria: Fossil Record |website= ucmp.berkeley.edu |access-date= 2010-08-26 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20100824004835/http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/bacteria/cyanofr.html |archive-date= 2010-08-24 |url-status= dead }}</ref> Because the Earth's atmosphere contained almost no oxygen during the estimated development of photosynthesis, it is believed that the first photosynthetic cyanobacteria did not generate oxygen.<ref>{{cite book |vauthors= Smith A |year= 2010 |title= Plant biology |publisher= Garland Science |location= New York |isbn= 978-0-8153-4025-6 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=eC0WBAAAQBAJ&pg=PA5 |page= 5 |access-date= 2019-04-17 |archive-date= 2023-01-19 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20230119181851/https://books.google.com/books?id=eC0WBAAAQBAJ&pg=PA5 |url-status= live }}</ref> Available evidence from geobiological studies of ] (>2500 Ma) ]s indicates that life existed 3500 Ma, but the question of when oxygenic photosynthesis evolved is still unanswered. A clear paleontological window on cyanobacterial ] opened about 2000 Ma, revealing an already-diverse biota of cyanobacteria. Cyanobacteria remained the principal ] of oxygen throughout the ] (2500–543 Ma), in part because the redox structure of the oceans favored photoautotrophs capable of ].<ref>{{Cite journal |last1= Olson |first1= Stephanie L. |last2= Reinhard |first2= Christopher T. |last3= Lyons |first3= Timothy W. |date=2016 |title=Cyanobacterial Diazotrophy and Earth's Delayed Oxygenation |journal= Frontiers in Microbiology |volume= 7 |pages= 1526 |doi= 10.3389/fmicb.2016.01526 |doi-access= free |issn= 1664-302X |pmc= 5033965 |pmid= 27721813 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1= Sánchez-Baracaldo |first1= Patricia |last2=Bianchini |first2= Giorgio |last3= Wilson |first3= Jamie D. |last4= Knoll |first4= Andrew H. |date= 2022 |title= Cyanobacteria and biogeochemical cycles through Earth history |url= https://www.cell.com/trends/microbiology/fulltext/S0966-842X(21)00131-1 |journal= Trends in Microbiology |volume= 30 |issue= 2 |pages= 143–157 |doi= 10.1016/j.tim.2021.05.008 |issn= 1878-4380 |pmid= 34229911 }}</ref> ] joined cyanobacteria as the major primary producers of oxygen on ] near the end of the ], but only with the ] (251–66 Ma) radiations of dinoflagellates, coccolithophorids, and diatoms did the ] of oxygen in marine shelf waters take modern form. Cyanobacteria remain critical to ]s as ] in oceanic gyres, as agents of biological nitrogen fixation, and, in modified form, as the ]s of marine algae.<ref>{{cite book |vauthors= Herrero A, Flores E |year= 2008 |title= The Cyanobacteria: Molecular Biology, Genomics and Evolution |edition= 1st |publisher= Caister Academic Press |isbn= 978-1-904455-15-8 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=xgMahO1BXrQC |access-date= 2019-04-17 |archive-date= 2023-01-19 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20230119181852/https://books.google.com/books?id=xgMahO1BXrQC |url-status= live }}</ref>

==Experimental history==
===Discovery===
Although some of the steps in photosynthesis are still not completely understood, the overall photosynthetic equation has been known since the 19th century.

] by ], c. 1674]]

] began the ] of the ] in the mid-17th century when he carefully measured the ] of the ] a ] was using and the mass of the plant as it grew. After noticing that the soil mass changed very little, he ] that the mass of the ] plant must come from the ], the only ] he added to the potted plant. His hypothesis was partially ] – much of the gained mass comes from ] as well as water. However, this was a signaling point to the idea that the bulk of a plant's ] comes from the inputs of photosynthesis, not the soil itself.

], a ] and ], discovered that when he isolated a ] of air under an inverted ] and burned a ] in it (which gave off ]), the candle would burn out very quickly, much before it ran out of ]. He further discovered that a ] could similarly ] air. He then showed that a plant could restore the air the candle and the mouse had "injured."<ref name="Martin-2012">{{cite journal |vauthors= Martin D, Thompson A, Stewart I, Gilbert E, Hope K, Kawai G, Griffiths A |date= September 2012 |title= A paradigm of fragile Earth in Priestley's bell jar |journal= Extreme Physiology & Medicine |volume= 1 |issue= 1 |pages= 4 |doi= 10.1186/2046-7648-1-4 |doi-access= free |pmc= 3707099 |pmid= 23849304 }}</ref>

In 1779, ] repeated Priestley's ]s. He discovered that it was the influence of ] on the plant that could cause it to revive a mouse in a matter of hours.<ref name="Martin-2012"/><ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Gest H |year= 2000 |title= Bicentenary homage to Dr Jan Ingen-Housz, MD (1730-1799), pioneer of photosynthesis research |journal= Photosynthesis Research |volume= 63 |issue= 2 |pages= 183–190 |doi= 10.1023/A:1006460024843 |doi-access= free |pmid= 16228428 |s2cid= 22970505 }}</ref>

In 1796, ], a Swiss ], ], and ], ] that ] consume carbon dioxide and release oxygen under the influence of ]. Soon afterward, ] showed that the increase in mass of the plant as it grows could not be due only to uptake of CO<sub>2</sub> but also to the incorporation of water. Thus, the basic ] by which ]s use photosynthesis to produce ] (such as ]) was outlined.<ref>{{cite book |vauthors= Rabinowitch EI |author-link1= Eugene Rabinowitch |date= 1945 |title= Photosynthesis and Related Processes |volume= 1 |via= ] |url= https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/26615#page/9/mode/1up |access-date= 2019-12-14 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20200806055256/https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/26615#page/9/mode/1up |archive-date= 2020-08-06 |url-status= live }}</ref>

===Refinements===
] made key discoveries explaining the ] of photosynthesis. By studying ] and ], he was the first to demonstrate that photosynthesis is a light-dependent ] in which hydrogen ] (donates its ]s as ]s and ]s to) carbon dioxide.

] discovered two light reactions by testing plant productivity using different wavelengths of light. With the red alone, the light reactions were suppressed. When blue and red were combined, the output was much more substantial. Thus, there were two photosystems, one absorbing up to 600&nbsp;nm wavelengths, the other up to 700&nbsp;nm. The former is known as PSII, the latter is PSI. PSI contains only chlorophyll "a", PSII contains primarily chlorophyll "a" with most of the available chlorophyll "b", among other pigments. These include phycobilins, which are the red and blue pigments of red and blue algae, respectively, and fucoxanthol for brown algae and diatoms. The process is most productive when the absorption of quanta is equal in both PSII and PSI, assuring that input energy from the antenna complex is divided between the PSI and PSII systems, which in turn powers the photochemistry.<ref name="McGraw-Hill-2007"/>

] thought that a complex of reactions consisted of an intermediate to cytochrome b<sub>6</sub> (now a plastoquinone), and that another was from cytochrome f to a step in the carbohydrate-generating mechanisms. These are linked by plastoquinone, which does require energy to reduce cytochrome f. Further experiments to prove that the oxygen developed during the photosynthesis of green plants came from water were performed by Hill in 1937 and 1939. He showed that isolated ]s give off oxygen in the presence of unnatural reducing agents like ] ], ] or ] after exposure to light. In the Hill reaction:<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Walker DA |author-link1= David Alan Walker |year= 2002 |title= 'And whose bright presence' – an appreciation of Robert Hill and his reaction |journal= Photosynthesis Research |volume= 73 |issue= 1–3 |pages= 51–54 |doi= 10.1023/A:1020479620680 |pmid= 16245102 |s2cid= 21567780 |url= http://www.life.uiuc.edu/govindjee/Part1/Part1_Walker.pdf |access-date= 2015-08-27 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20080309113247/http://www.life.uiuc.edu/govindjee/Part1/Part1_Walker.pdf |archive-date= 2008-03-09 |url-status= dead }}</ref>

:2 H<sub>2</sub>O + 2 A + (light, chloroplasts) → 2 AH<sub>2</sub> + O<sub>2</sub>

A is the electron acceptor. Therefore, in light, the electron acceptor is reduced and oxygen is evolved. ] and ] used ] to determine that the oxygen liberated in photosynthesis came from the water.

] works in his photosynthesis laboratory.]]

] and ], along with ], elucidated the path of carbon assimilation (the photosynthetic carbon reduction cycle) in plants. The carbon reduction cycle is known as the ], but many scientists refer to it as the Calvin-Benson, Benson-Calvin, or even Calvin-Benson-Bassham (or CBB) Cycle.

]–winning scientist ] was later able to discover the function and significance of the electron transport chain.

] and ] discovered the I-quantum photosynthesis reaction that splits CO<sub>2</sub>, activated by the respiration.<ref> {{Webarchive |url= https://web.archive.org/web/20101215084840/http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/medicine/laureates/1931/warburg.html |date= 2010-12-15 }}. Nobelprize.org (1970-08-01). Retrieved on 2011-11-03.</ref>

In 1950, first experimental evidence for the existence of ] ''in vivo'' was presented by ] using intact '']'' cells and interpreting his findings as light-dependent ] formation.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Kandler O |author-link= Otto Kandler |year= 1950 |title= Über die Beziehungen zwischen Phosphathaushalt und Photosynthese. I. Phosphatspiegelschwankungen bei Chlorella pyrenoidosa als Folge des Licht-Dunkel-Wechsels |trans-title= On the relationship between the phosphate metabolism and photosynthesis I. Variations in phosphate levels in Chlorella pyrenoidosa as a consequence of light-dark changes |journal= Zeitschrift für Naturforschung |volume= 5b |issue= 8 |pages= 423–437 |doi= 10.1515/znb-1950-0806 |s2cid= 97588826 |url= http://zfn.mpdl.mpg.de/xtf/data/Reihe_B/5/ZNB-1950-5b-0423.pdf |access-date= 2018-06-26 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20180624204544/http://zfn.mpdl.mpg.de/xtf/data/Reihe_B/5/ZNB-1950-5b-0423.pdf |archive-date= 2018-06-24 |url-status= live }}</ref>
In 1954, ] et al. discovered photophosphorylation ''in vitro'' in isolated ]s with the help of P<sup>32</sup>.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Arnon DI, Whatley FR, Allen MB |author-link1= Daniel I. Arnon |year= 1954 |title= Photosynthesis by isolated chloroplasts. II. Photophosphorylation, the conversion of light into phosphate bond energy |journal= Journal of the American Chemical Society |volume= 76 |issue= 24 |pages= 6324–6329 |doi= 10.1021/ja01653a025 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Arnon DI |author-link= Daniel I. Arnon |year= 1956 |title= Phosphorus metabolism and photosynthesis |journal= Annual Review of Plant Physiology |volume= 7 |pages= 325–354 |doi= 10.1146/annurev.pp.07.060156.001545 }}</ref>

] and ] discovered that chlorophyll "a" will absorb one light, oxidize cytochrome f, while chlorophyll "a" (and other pigments) will absorb another light but will reduce this same oxidized cytochrome, stating the two light reactions are in series.

===Development of the concept===
In 1893, the American botanist ] proposed two terms, ''photosyntax'' and ''photosynthesis'', for the biological process of ''synthesis of complex carbon compounds out of carbonic acid, in the presence of chlorophyll, under the influence of light''. The term ''photosynthesis'' is derived from the ] ''phōs'' (], gleam) and ''sýnthesis'' (], arranging together),<ref name="Online Etymology Dictionary">{{cite web |title= Photosynthesis |work= ] |url= http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=photosynthesis&allowed_in_frame=0 |access-date= 2013-05-23 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20130307020959/http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=photosynthesis&allowed_in_frame=0 |archive-date= 2013-03-07 |url-status= live }}</ref><ref>{{cite encyclopedia |vauthors= Liddell HG, Scott R |author-link1= Henry Liddell |author-link2= Robert Scott (philologist) |title= φῶς |url= https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus:text:1999.04.0057:entry=fw=s2 |dictionary= ] |publisher= ] }}</ref><ref>{{cite encyclopedia |vauthors= Liddell HG, Scott R |author-link1= Henry Liddell |author-link2= Robert Scott (philologist) |title= σύνθεσις |dictionary= ] |publisher= ] |url= https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus:text:1999.04.0057:entry=su/nqesis }}</ref> while another word that he designated was ''photosyntax'', from ''sýntaxis'' (], configuration). Over time, the term ''photosynthesis'' came into common usage. Later discovery of anoxygenic photosynthetic bacteria and photophosphorylation necessitated redefinition of the term.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Gest H |year= 2002 |title= History of the word photosynthesis and evolution of its definition |journal= Photosynthesis Research |volume= 73 |issue= 1–3 |pages= 7–10 |doi= 10.1023/A:1020419417954 |pmid= 16245098 |s2cid= 11265932 }}</ref>

===C3 : C4 photosynthesis research===
In the late 1940s at the ], the details of photosynthetic carbon metabolism were sorted out by the chemists ], Andrew Benson, James Bassham and a score of students and researchers utilizing the carbon-14 isotope and paper chromatography techniques.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Calvin M |title= Forty years of photosynthesis and related activities |journal= Photosynthesis Research |volume= 21 |issue= 1 |pages= 3–16 |date= July 1989 |bibcode= 1989PhoRe..21....3C |doi= 10.1007/BF00047170 |pmid= 24424488 |s2cid= 40443000 |name-list-style= vanc }}</ref> The pathway of CO<sub>2</sub> fixation by the algae ''Chlorella'' in a fraction of a second in light resulted in a three carbon molecule called phosphoglyceric acid (PGA). For that original and ground-breaking work, a ] was awarded to Melvin Calvin in 1961. In parallel, plant physiologists studied leaf gas exchanges using the new method of infrared gas analysis and a leaf chamber where the net photosynthetic rates ranged from 10 to 13 μmol CO<sub>2</sub>·m<sup>−2</sup>·s<sup>−1</sup>, with the conclusion that all terrestrial plants have the same photosynthetic capacities, that are light saturated at less than 50% of sunlight.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Verduin J |year= 1953 |title= A table of photosynthesis rates under optimal, near natural conditions. |journal= Am. J. Bot. |volume= 40 |issue= 9 |pages= 675–679 |doi=10.1002/j.1537-2197.1953.tb06540.x |jstor= 2439681 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Verduin J, Whitwer EE, Cowell BC |date= July 1959 |title= Maximal photosynthetic rates in nature |journal= Science |volume= 130 |issue= 3370 |pages= 268–269 |bibcode= 1959Sci...130..268V |doi= 10.1126/science.130.3370.268 |pmid= 13668557 |s2cid= 34122342 }}</ref>

Later in 1958–1963 at ], field grown ] was reported to have much greater leaf photosynthetic rates of 40 μmol CO<sub>2</sub>·m<sup>−2</sup>·s<sup>−1</sup> and not be saturated at near full sunlight.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Hesketh JD, Musgrave R |year= 1962 |title= Photosynthesis under field conditions. IV. Light studies with individual corn leaves |journal= Crop Sci. |volume= 2 |issue= 4 |pages= 311–315 |doi= 10.2135/cropsci1962.0011183x000200040011x |s2cid= 83706567 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Hesketh JD, Moss DN |year= 1963 |title= Variation in the response of photosynthesis to light |journal= Crop Sci. |volume= 3 |issue= 2 |pages= 107–110 |doi= 10.2135/cropsci1963.0011183X000300020002x }}</ref> This higher rate in maize was almost double of those observed in other species such as wheat and soybean, indicating that large differences in photosynthesis exist among higher plants. At the University of Arizona, detailed gas exchange research on more than 15 species of ]s and ]s uncovered for the first time that differences in leaf anatomy are crucial factors in differentiating photosynthetic capacities among species.<ref name="El-Sharkawy-1965">{{cite journal |vauthors= El-Sharkawy, MA, Hesketh JD |year= 1965 |title= Photosynthesis among species in relation to characteristics of leaf anatomy and CO<sub>2</sub> diffusion resistances |journal= Crop Sci. |volume= 5 |issue= 6 |pages= 517–521 |doi=10.2135/cropsci1965.0011183x000500060010x}}</ref><ref name="El-Sharkawy-1986">{{cite journal |vauthors= El-Sharkawy MA, Hesketh JD |year= 1986 |title= Citation Classic-Photosynthesis among species in relation to characteristics of leaf anatomy and CO<sub>2</sub> diffusion resistances |journal= Curr. Cont./Agr.Biol.Environ |volume= 27 |page= 14 |url= http://www.garfield.library.upenn.edu/classics1986/A1986C891300001.pdf |access-date= 2023-12-06 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20231129020950/http://www.garfield.library.upenn.edu/classics1986/A1986C891300001.pdf |archive-date= 2023-11-29 |url-status= dead }}</ref> In tropical grasses, including maize, sorghum, sugarcane, Bermuda grass and in the dicot amaranthus, leaf photosynthetic rates were around 38−40 μmol CO<sub>2</sub>·m<sup>−2</sup>·s<sup>−1</sup>, and the leaves have two types of green cells, i.e. outer layer of mesophyll cells surrounding a tightly packed cholorophyllous vascular bundle sheath cells. This type of anatomy was termed Kranz anatomy in the 19th century by the botanist ] while studying leaf anatomy of sugarcane.<ref>{{cite book |vauthors= Haberlandt G |year= 1904 |title= Physiologische Pflanzanatomie |publisher= Engelmann |location= Leipzig |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=6pk_AAAAYAAJ |access-date= 2019-04-17 |archive-date= 2023-01-19 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20230119181853/https://books.google.com/books?id=6pk_AAAAYAAJ |url-status= live }}</ref> Plant species with the greatest photosynthetic rates and Kranz anatomy showed no apparent photorespiration, very low CO<sub>2</sub> compensation point, high optimum temperature, high stomatal resistances and lower mesophyll resistances for gas diffusion and rates never saturated at full sun light.<ref>{{cite thesis |vauthors= El-Sharkawy MA |year= 1965 |title= Factors Limiting Photosynthetic Rates of Different Plant Species |degree= Ph.D. |publisher= The University of Arizona, Tucson}}</ref> The research at Arizona was designated a Citation Classic in 1986.<ref name="El-Sharkawy-1986"/> These species were later termed C4 plants as the first stable compound of CO<sub>2</sub> fixation in light has four carbons as malate and aspartate.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Karpilov YS |year= 1960 |title= The distribution of radioactvity in carbon-14 among the products of photosynthesis in maize |journal= Proc. Kazan Agric. Inst. |volume= 14 |pages= 15–24 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Kortschak HP, Hart CE, Burr GO |year= 1965 |title= Carbon dioxide fixation in sugarcane leaves |journal= Plant Physiol |volume= 40 |issue= 2 |pages= 209–213 |doi= 10.1104/pp.40.2.209 |pmc= 550268 |pmid= 16656075 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Hatch MD, Slack CR |year= 1966 |title= Photosynthesis by sugar-cane leaves. A new carboxylation reaction and the pathway of sugar formation |journal= Biochem. J. |volume= 101 |issue= 1 |pages= 103–111 |doi= 10.1042/bj1010103 |pmc= 1270070 |pmid= 5971771 }}</ref> Other species that lack Kranz anatomy were termed C3 type such as cotton and sunflower, as the first stable carbon compound is the three-carbon PGA. At 1000 ppm CO<sub>2</sub> in measuring air, both the C3 and C4 plants had similar leaf photosynthetic rates around 60 μmol CO<sub>2</sub>·m<sup>−2</sup>·s<sup>−1</sup> indicating the suppression of photorespiration in C3 plants.<ref name="El-Sharkawy-1965"/><ref name="El-Sharkawy-1986"/>

==Factors==

] is the primary site of photosynthesis in plants.]]
There are four main factors influencing photosynthesis and several corollary factors. The four main are:<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Stirbet A, Lazár D, Guo Y, Govindjee G |date= September 2020 |title= Photosynthesis: basics, history and modelling |journal= Annals of Botany |volume= 126 |issue= 4 |pages= 511–537 |doi= 10.1093/aob/mcz171 |pmc= 7489092 |pmid= 31641747 |url= https://academic.oup.com/aob/article/126/4/511/5602694?login=true |access-date= 2023-02-09 }}</ref>
* Light ] and ]
* Water absorption
* ] ]
* ].

Total photosynthesis is limited by a range of environmental factors. These include the amount of light available, the amount of ] area a plant has to capture light (shading by other plants is a major limitation of photosynthesis), the rate at which carbon dioxide can be supplied to the ]s to support photosynthesis, the availability of water, and the availability of suitable temperatures for carrying out photosynthesis.<ref>{{cite book |vauthors= Chapin FS, Matson PA, Mooney HA |year= 2002 |title= Principles of Terrestrial Ecosystem Ecology |publisher= Springer |pages= 97–104 |isbn= 978-0-387-95443-1 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=shsBCAAAQBAJ&pg=PA97 |location= New York |access-date= 2019-04-17 |archive-date= 2023-01-19 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20230119181855/https://books.google.com/books?id=shsBCAAAQBAJ&pg=PA97 |url-status= live }}</ref>

===Light intensity (irradiance), wavelength and temperature===
{{See also|PI curve|label 1=PI (photosynthesis-irradiance) curve}}
] spectra of free chlorophyll ''a'' (<span style="color:blue;">blue</span>) and ''b'' (<span style="color:red;">red</span>) in a solvent. The action spectra of chlorophyll molecules are slightly modified ''in vivo'' depending on specific pigment–protein interactions.]]
The process of photosynthesis provides the main input of free energy into the biosphere, and is one of four main ways in which radiation is important for plant life.<ref>{{cite book |vauthors= Jones HG |date= 2014 |title= Plants and Microclimate: a Quantitative Approach to Environmental Plant Physiology |edition= Third |location= Cambridge |publisher= Cambridge University Press |isbn= 978-0-521-27959-8 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=BYALAgAAQBAJ |access-date= 2019-04-17 |archive-date= 2023-01-19 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20230119181859/https://books.google.com/books?id=BYALAgAAQBAJ |url-status= live }}</ref>

The radiation climate within plant communities is extremely variable, in both time and space.

In the early 20th century, ] and ] investigated the effects of light intensity (]) and temperature on the rate of carbon assimilation.
* At constant temperature, the rate of carbon assimilation varies with irradiance, increasing as the irradiance increases, but reaching a plateau at higher irradiance.
* At low irradiance, increasing the temperature has little influence on the rate of carbon assimilation. At constant high irradiance, the rate of carbon assimilation increases as the temperature is increased.

<!--] unsourced graph with swapped axis titles -->
These two experiments illustrate several important points: First, it is known that, in general, ] reactions are not affected by ]. However, these experiments clearly show that temperature affects the rate of carbon assimilation, so there must be two sets of reactions in the full process of carbon assimilation. These are the light-dependent 'photochemical' temperature-independent stage, and the light-independent, temperature-dependent stage. Second, Blackman's experiments illustrate the concept of ]s. Another limiting factor is the wavelength of light. Cyanobacteria, which reside several meters underwater, cannot receive the correct wavelengths required to cause photoinduced charge separation in conventional photosynthetic pigments. To combat this problem, Cyanobacteria have a light-harvesting complex called ].<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors= Adir N, Bar-Zvi S, Harris D |date= April 2020 |title= The amazing phycobilisome |journal= Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Bioenergetics |series= Light harvesting |volume= 1861 |issue= 4 |pages= 148047 |doi= 10.1016/j.bbabio.2019.07.002 |doi-access= free |pmid= 31306623 |s2cid= 196810874 }}</ref> This complex is made up of a series of proteins with different pigments which surround the reaction center.

===Carbon dioxide levels and photorespiration===
]
As carbon dioxide concentrations rise, the rate at which sugars are made by the light-independent reactions increases until limited by other factors. ], the enzyme that captures carbon dioxide in the light-independent reactions, has a binding affinity for both carbon dioxide and oxygen. When the concentration of carbon dioxide is high, RuBisCO will fix carbon dioxide. However, if the carbon dioxide concentration is low, RuBisCO will bind oxygen instead of carbon dioxide. This process, called ], uses energy, but does not produce sugars.

RuBisCO oxygenase activity is disadvantageous to plants for several reasons:
# One product of oxygenase activity is phosphoglycolate (2 carbon) instead of ] (3 carbon). Phosphoglycolate cannot be metabolized by the Calvin-Benson cycle and represents carbon lost from the cycle. A high oxygenase activity, therefore, drains the sugars that are required to recycle ribulose 5-bisphosphate and for the continuation of the ].
# Phosphoglycolate is quickly metabolized to glycolate that is toxic to a plant at a high concentration; it inhibits photosynthesis.
# Salvaging glycolate is an energetically expensive process that uses the glycolate pathway, and only 75% of the carbon is returned to the Calvin-Benson cycle as 3-phosphoglycerate. The reactions also produce ] (NH<sub>3</sub>), which is able to ] out of the plant, leading to a loss of nitrogen.

::A highly simplified summary is:

:::2 glycolate + ATP → 3-phosphoglycerate + carbon dioxide + ADP + NH<sub>3</sub>

The salvaging pathway for the products of RuBisCO oxygenase activity is more commonly known as photorespiration, since it is characterized by light-dependent oxygen consumption and the release of carbon dioxide.

== See also ==
{{Portal|Environment|Ecology|Earth sciences}}
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== References ==
{{Reflist}}

== Further reading ==
{{Library resources box
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===Books===
{{Refbegin|33em}}
* {{cite book |vauthors=Bidlack JE, Stern KR, Jansky S | title = Introductory Plant Biology | publisher = McGraw-Hill | location = New York | year = 2003 | isbn = 978-0-07-290941-8 }}
* {{cite book | author1-link = Robert E. Blankenship | vauthors = Blankenship RE | title = Molecular Mechanisms of Photosynthesis | edition = 2nd | publisher = ] | year = 2014 | isbn = 978-1-4051-8975-0 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=jQztAgAAQBAJ | access-date = 2019-04-17 | archive-date = 2023-01-19 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20230119182407/https://books.google.com/books?id=jQztAgAAQBAJ | url-status = live }}
* {{cite book | vauthors = Govindjee, Beatty JT, Gest H, Allen JF | title = Discoveries in Photosynthesis | publisher = Springer | location = Berlin | year = 2006 | series = Advances in Photosynthesis and Respiration | volume = 20 | isbn = 978-1-4020-3323-0 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=I3gy4r-aBusC | access-date = 2019-04-17 | archive-date = 2023-01-19 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20230119182408/https://books.google.com/books?id=I3gy4r-aBusC | url-status = live }}
* {{cite book |vauthors=Reece JB, etal | title = Campbell Biology | publisher = ] | year = 2013 | isbn = 978-0-321-77565-8 }}
{{Refend}}

===Papers===
{{refbegin|33em}}
* {{cite journal | vauthors = Gupta RS, Mukhtar T, Singh B | title = Evolutionary relationships among photosynthetic prokaryotes (''Heliobacterium chlorum'', ''Chloroflexus aurantiacus'', cyanobacteria, ''Chlorobium tepidum'' and proteobacteria): implications regarding the origin of photosynthesis | journal = Molecular Microbiology | volume = 32 | issue = 5 | pages = 893–906 | date = Jun 1999 | pmid = 10361294 | doi = 10.1046/j.1365-2958.1999.01417.x| s2cid = 33477550 }}
* {{cite journal | vauthors = Rutherford AW, Faller P | title = Photosystem II: evolutionary perspectives | journal = Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences | volume = 358 | issue = 1429 | pages = 245–253 | date = Jan 2003 | pmid = 12594932 | pmc = 1693113 | doi = 10.1098/rstb.2002.1186 }}
{{refend}}

== External links ==
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* Article appropriate for high school science
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* Interactive animation, a textbook tutorial
* {{cite web |vauthors=Marshall J |title=First practical artificial leaf makes debut |url=http://news.discovery.com/earth/artificial-leaf-technology-solar-110329.html |date=2011-03-29 |publisher=Discovery News |access-date=2011-03-29 |archive-date=2012-03-22 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120322025811/http://news.discovery.com/earth/artificial-leaf-technology-solar-110329.html |url-status=dead }}
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110910160803/http://www.biology-innovation.co.uk/pages/plant-biology-ecology/photosynthesis/ |date=2011-09-10 }}
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Latest revision as of 17:17, 26 December 2024

Biological process to convert light into chemical energy

Schematic of photosynthesis in plants. The carbohydrates produced are stored in or used by the plant.
Composite image showing the global distribution of photosynthesis, including both oceanic phytoplankton and terrestrial vegetation. Dark red and blue-green indicate regions of high photosynthetic activity in the ocean and on land, respectively.

Photosynthesis (/ˌfoʊtəˈsɪnθəsɪs/ FOH-tə-SINTH-ə-sis) is a system of biological processes by which photosynthetic organisms, such as most plants, algae, and cyanobacteria, convert light energy, typically from sunlight, into the chemical energy necessary to fuel their metabolism. Photosynthesis usually refers to oxygenic photosynthesis, a process that produces oxygen. Photosynthetic organisms store the chemical energy so produced within intracellular organic compounds (compounds containing carbon) like sugars, glycogen, cellulose and starches. To use this stored chemical energy, an organism's cells metabolize the organic compounds through cellular respiration. Photosynthesis plays a critical role in producing and maintaining the oxygen content of the Earth's atmosphere, and it supplies most of the biological energy necessary for complex life on Earth.

Some bacteria also perform anoxygenic photosynthesis, which uses bacteriochlorophyll to split hydrogen sulfide as a reductant instead of water, producing sulfur instead of oxygen. Archaea such as Halobacterium also perform a type of non-carbon-fixing anoxygenic photosynthesis, where the simpler photopigment retinal and its microbial rhodopsin derivatives are used to absorb green light and power proton pumps to directly synthesize adenosine triphosphate (ATP), the "energy currency" of cells. Such archaeal photosynthesis might have been the earliest form of photosynthesis that evolved on Earth, as far back as the Paleoarchean, preceding that of cyanobacteria (see Purple Earth hypothesis).

While the details may differ between species, the process always begins when light energy is absorbed by the reaction centers, proteins that contain photosynthetic pigments or chromophores. In plants, these pigments are chlorophylls (a porphyrin derivative that absorbs the red and blue spectrums of light, thus reflecting green) held inside chloroplasts, abundant in leaf cells. In bacteria, they are embedded in the plasma membrane. In these light-dependent reactions, some energy is used to strip electrons from suitable substances, such as water, producing oxygen gas. The hydrogen freed by the splitting of water is used in the creation of two important molecules that participate in energetic processes: reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) and ATP.

In plants, algae, and cyanobacteria, sugars are synthesized by a subsequent sequence of light-independent reactions called the Calvin cycle. In this process, atmospheric carbon dioxide is incorporated into already existing organic compounds, such as ribulose bisphosphate (RuBP). Using the ATP and NADPH produced by the light-dependent reactions, the resulting compounds are then reduced and removed to form further carbohydrates, such as glucose. In other bacteria, different mechanisms like the reverse Krebs cycle are used to achieve the same end.

The first photosynthetic organisms probably evolved early in the evolutionary history of life using reducing agents such as hydrogen or hydrogen sulfide, rather than water, as sources of electrons. Cyanobacteria appeared later; the excess oxygen they produced contributed directly to the oxygenation of the Earth, which rendered the evolution of complex life possible. The average rate of energy captured by global photosynthesis is approximately 130 terawatts, which is about eight times the total power consumption of human civilization. Photosynthetic organisms also convert around 100–115 billion tons (91–104 Pg petagrams, or billions of metric tons), of carbon into biomass per year. Photosynthesis was discovered in 1779 by Jan Ingenhousz who showed that plants need light, not just soil and water.

Overview

Main article: Biological carbon fixation
Photosynthesis changes sunlight into chemical energy, splits water to liberate O2, and fixes CO2 into sugar.

Most photosynthetic organisms are photoautotrophs, which means that they are able to synthesize food directly from carbon dioxide and water using energy from light. However, not all organisms use carbon dioxide as a source of carbon atoms to carry out photosynthesis; photoheterotrophs use organic compounds, rather than carbon dioxide, as a source of carbon.

In plants, algae, and cyanobacteria, photosynthesis releases oxygen. This oxygenic photosynthesis is by far the most common type of photosynthesis used by living organisms. Some shade-loving plants (sciophytes) produce such low levels of oxygen during photosynthesis that they use all of it themselves instead of releasing it to the atmosphere.

Although there are some differences between oxygenic photosynthesis in plants, algae, and cyanobacteria, the overall process is quite similar in these organisms. There are also many varieties of anoxygenic photosynthesis, used mostly by bacteria, which consume carbon dioxide but do not release oxygen.

Carbon dioxide is converted into sugars in a process called carbon fixation; photosynthesis captures energy from sunlight to convert carbon dioxide into carbohydrates. Carbon fixation is an endothermic redox reaction. In general outline, photosynthesis is the opposite of cellular respiration: while photosynthesis is a process of reduction of carbon dioxide to carbohydrates, cellular respiration is the oxidation of carbohydrates or other nutrients to carbon dioxide. Nutrients used in cellular respiration include carbohydrates, amino acids and fatty acids. These nutrients are oxidized to produce carbon dioxide and water, and to release chemical energy to drive the organism's metabolism.

Photosynthesis and cellular respiration are distinct processes, as they take place through different sequences of chemical reactions and in different cellular compartments (cellular respiration in mitochondria).

The general equation for photosynthesis as first proposed by Cornelis van Niel is:

CO2carbon
dioxide + 2H2Aelectron donor + photonslight energy → carbohydrate + 2Aoxidized
electron
donor + H2Owater

Since water is used as the electron donor in oxygenic photosynthesis, the equation for this process is:

CO2carbon
dioxide + 2H2Owater + photonslight energy → carbohydrate + O2oxygen + H2Owater

This equation emphasizes that water is both a reactant in the light-dependent reaction and a product of the light-independent reaction, but canceling n water molecules from each side gives the net equation:

CO2carbon
dioxide + H2O water + photonslight energy → carbohydrate + O2 oxygen

Other processes substitute other compounds (such as arsenite) for water in the electron-supply role; for example some microbes use sunlight to oxidize arsenite to arsenate: The equation for this reaction is:

CO2carbon
dioxide + (AsO
3)
arsenite + photonslight energy → (AsO
4)
arsenate + COcarbon
monoxide(used to build other compounds in subsequent reactions)

Photosynthesis occurs in two stages. In the first stage, light-dependent reactions or light reactions capture the energy of light and use it to make the hydrogen carrier NADPH and the energy-storage molecule ATP. During the second stage, the light-independent reactions use these products to capture and reduce carbon dioxide.

Most organisms that use oxygenic photosynthesis use visible light for the light-dependent reactions, although at least three use shortwave infrared or, more specifically, far-red radiation.

Some organisms employ even more radical variants of photosynthesis. Some archaea use a simpler method that employs a pigment similar to those used for vision in animals. The bacteriorhodopsin changes its configuration in response to sunlight, acting as a proton pump. This produces a proton gradient more directly, which is then converted to chemical energy. The process does not involve carbon dioxide fixation and does not release oxygen, and seems to have evolved separately from the more common types of photosynthesis.

Photosynthetic membranes and organelles

Main articles: Chloroplast and Thylakoid
Chloroplast ultrastructure:
  1. outer membrane
  2. intermembrane space
  3. inner membrane (1+2+3: envelope)
  4. stroma (aqueous fluid)
  5. thylakoid lumen (inside of thylakoid)
  6. thylakoid membrane
  7. granum (stack of thylakoids)
  8. thylakoid (lamella)
  9. starch
  10. ribosome
  11. plastidial DNA
  12. plastoglobule (drop of lipids)

In photosynthetic bacteria, the proteins that gather light for photosynthesis are embedded in cell membranes. In its simplest form, this involves the membrane surrounding the cell itself. However, the membrane may be tightly folded into cylindrical sheets called thylakoids, or bunched up into round vesicles called intracytoplasmic membranes. These structures can fill most of the interior of a cell, giving the membrane a very large surface area and therefore increasing the amount of light that the bacteria can absorb.

In plants and algae, photosynthesis takes place in organelles called chloroplasts. A typical plant cell contains about 10 to 100 chloroplasts. The chloroplast is enclosed by a membrane. This membrane is composed of a phospholipid inner membrane, a phospholipid outer membrane, and an intermembrane space. Enclosed by the membrane is an aqueous fluid called the stroma. Embedded within the stroma are stacks of thylakoids (grana), which are the site of photosynthesis. The thylakoids appear as flattened disks. The thylakoid itself is enclosed by the thylakoid membrane, and within the enclosed volume is a lumen or thylakoid space. Embedded in the thylakoid membrane are integral and peripheral membrane protein complexes of the photosynthetic system.

Plants absorb light primarily using the pigment chlorophyll. The green part of the light spectrum is not absorbed but is reflected, which is the reason that most plants have a green color. Besides chlorophyll, plants also use pigments such as carotenes and xanthophylls. Algae also use chlorophyll, but various other pigments are present, such as phycocyanin, carotenes, and xanthophylls in green algae, phycoerythrin in red algae (rhodophytes) and fucoxanthin in brown algae and diatoms resulting in a wide variety of colors.

These pigments are embedded in plants and algae in complexes called antenna proteins. In such proteins, the pigments are arranged to work together. Such a combination of proteins is also called a light-harvesting complex.

Although all cells in the green parts of a plant have chloroplasts, the majority of those are found in specially adapted structures called leaves. Certain species adapted to conditions of strong sunlight and aridity, such as many Euphorbia and cactus species, have their main photosynthetic organs in their stems. The cells in the interior tissues of a leaf, called the mesophyll, can contain between 450,000 and 800,000 chloroplasts for every square millimeter of leaf. The surface of the leaf is coated with a water-resistant waxy cuticle that protects the leaf from excessive evaporation of water and decreases the absorption of ultraviolet or blue light to minimize heating. The transparent epidermis layer allows light to pass through to the palisade mesophyll cells where most of the photosynthesis takes place.

Light-dependent reactions

Main article: Light-dependent reactions
Light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis at the thylakoid membrane

In the light-dependent reactions, one molecule of the pigment chlorophyll absorbs one photon and loses one electron. This electron is taken up by a modified form of chlorophyll called pheophytin, which passes the electron to a quinone molecule, starting the flow of electrons down an electron transport chain that leads to the ultimate reduction of NADP to NADPH. In addition, this creates a proton gradient (energy gradient) across the chloroplast membrane, which is used by ATP synthase in the synthesis of ATP. The chlorophyll molecule ultimately regains the electron it lost when a water molecule is split in a process called photolysis, which releases oxygen.

The overall equation for the light-dependent reactions under the conditions of non-cyclic electron flow in green plants is:

2 H2O + 2 NADP + 3 ADP + 3 Pi + light → 2 NADPH + 2 H + 3 ATP + O2

Not all wavelengths of light can support photosynthesis. The photosynthetic action spectrum depends on the type of accessory pigments present. For example, in green plants, the action spectrum resembles the absorption spectrum for chlorophylls and carotenoids with absorption peaks in violet-blue and red light. In red algae, the action spectrum is blue-green light, which allows these algae to use the blue end of the spectrum to grow in the deeper waters that filter out the longer wavelengths (red light) used by above-ground green plants. The non-absorbed part of the light spectrum is what gives photosynthetic organisms their color (e.g., green plants, red algae, purple bacteria) and is the least effective for photosynthesis in the respective organisms.

Z scheme

The "Z scheme"

In plants, light-dependent reactions occur in the thylakoid membranes of the chloroplasts where they drive the synthesis of ATP and NADPH. The light-dependent reactions are of two forms: cyclic and non-cyclic.

In the non-cyclic reaction, the photons are captured in the light-harvesting antenna complexes of photosystem II by chlorophyll and other accessory pigments (see diagram "Z-scheme"). The absorption of a photon by the antenna complex loosens an electron by a process called photoinduced charge separation. The antenna system is at the core of the chlorophyll molecule of the photosystem II reaction center. That loosened electron is taken up by the primary electron-acceptor molecule, pheophytin. As the electrons are shuttled through an electron transport chain (the so-called Z-scheme shown in the diagram), a chemiosmotic potential is generated by pumping proton cations (H) across the membrane and into the thylakoid space. An ATP synthase enzyme uses that chemiosmotic potential to make ATP during photophosphorylation, whereas NADPH is a product of the terminal redox reaction in the Z-scheme. The electron enters a chlorophyll molecule in Photosystem I. There it is further excited by the light absorbed by that photosystem. The electron is then passed along a chain of electron acceptors to which it transfers some of its energy. The energy delivered to the electron acceptors is used to move hydrogen ions across the thylakoid membrane into the lumen. The electron is eventually used to reduce the coenzyme NADP with an H to NADPH (which has functions in the light-independent reaction); at that point, the path of that electron ends.

The cyclic reaction is similar to that of the non-cyclic but differs in that it generates only ATP, and no reduced NADP (NADPH) is created. The cyclic reaction takes place only at photosystem I. Once the electron is displaced from the photosystem, the electron is passed down the electron acceptor molecules and returns to photosystem I, from where it was emitted, hence the name cyclic reaction.

Water photolysis

Main articles: Photodissociation and Oxygen evolution

Linear electron transport through a photosystem will leave the reaction center of that photosystem oxidized. Elevating another electron will first require re-reduction of the reaction center. The excited electrons lost from the reaction center (P700) of photosystem I are replaced by transfer from plastocyanin, whose electrons come from electron transport through photosystem II. Photosystem II, as the first step of the Z-scheme, requires an external source of electrons to reduce its oxidized chlorophyll a reaction center. The source of electrons for photosynthesis in green plants and cyanobacteria is water. Two water molecules are oxidized by the energy of four successive charge-separation reactions of photosystem II to yield a molecule of diatomic oxygen and four hydrogen ions. The electrons yielded are transferred to a redox-active tyrosine residue that is oxidized by the energy of P680. This resets the ability of P680 to absorb another photon and release another photo-dissociated electron. The oxidation of water is catalyzed in photosystem II by a redox-active structure that contains four manganese ions and a calcium ion; this oxygen-evolving complex binds two water molecules and contains the four oxidizing equivalents that are used to drive the water-oxidizing reaction (Kok's S-state diagrams). The hydrogen ions are released in the thylakoid lumen and therefore contribute to the transmembrane chemiosmotic potential that leads to ATP synthesis. Oxygen is a waste product of light-dependent reactions, but the majority of organisms on Earth use oxygen and its energy for cellular respiration, including photosynthetic organisms.

Light-independent reactions

Calvin cycle

Main articles: Light-independent reactions and Carbon fixation

In the light-independent (or "dark") reactions, the enzyme RuBisCO captures CO2 from the atmosphere and, in a process called the Calvin cycle, uses the newly formed NADPH and releases three-carbon sugars, which are later combined to form sucrose and starch. The overall equation for the light-independent reactions in green plants is

3 CO2 + 9 ATP + 6 NADPH + 6 H → C3H6O3-phosphate + 9 ADP + 8 Pi + 6 NADP + 3 H2O
Overview of the Calvin cycle and carbon fixation

Carbon fixation produces the three-carbon sugar intermediate, which is then converted into the final carbohydrate products. The simple carbon sugars photosynthesis produces are then used to form other organic compounds, such as the building material cellulose, the precursors for lipid and amino acid biosynthesis, or as a fuel in cellular respiration. The latter occurs not only in plants but also in animals when the carbon and energy from plants is passed through a food chain.

The fixation or reduction of carbon dioxide is a process in which carbon dioxide combines with a five-carbon sugar, ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate, to yield two molecules of a three-carbon compound, glycerate 3-phosphate, also known as 3-phosphoglycerate. Glycerate 3-phosphate, in the presence of ATP and NADPH produced during the light-dependent stages, is reduced to glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate. This product is also referred to as 3-phosphoglyceraldehyde (PGAL) or, more generically, as triose phosphate. Most (five out of six molecules) of the glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate produced are used to regenerate ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate so the process can continue. The triose phosphates not thus "recycled" often condense to form hexose phosphates, which ultimately yield sucrose, starch, and cellulose, as well as glucose and fructose. The sugars produced during carbon metabolism yield carbon skeletons that can be used for other metabolic reactions like the production of amino acids and lipids.

Carbon concentrating mechanisms

On land

Main articles: C4 carbon fixation, CAM photosynthesis, and Alarm photosynthesis
Overview of C4 carbon fixation. (This image mistakenly shows lactic acid instead of pyruvate, and all the species ending in "-ate" are shown as unionized acids, such as malic acid and so on).

In hot and dry conditions, plants close their stomata to prevent water loss. Under these conditions, CO2 will decrease and oxygen gas, produced by the light reactions of photosynthesis, will increase, causing an increase of photorespiration by the oxygenase activity of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RuBisCO) and decrease in carbon fixation. Some plants have evolved mechanisms to increase the CO2 concentration in the leaves under these conditions.

Plants that use the C4 carbon fixation process chemically fix carbon dioxide in the cells of the mesophyll by adding it to the three-carbon molecule phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP), a reaction catalyzed by an enzyme called PEP carboxylase, creating the four-carbon organic acid oxaloacetic acid. Oxaloacetic acid or malate synthesized by this process is then translocated to specialized bundle sheath cells where the enzyme RuBisCO and other Calvin cycle enzymes are located, and where CO2 released by decarboxylation of the four-carbon acids is then fixed by RuBisCO activity to the three-carbon 3-phosphoglyceric acids. The physical separation of RuBisCO from the oxygen-generating light reactions reduces photorespiration and increases CO2 fixation and, thus, the photosynthetic capacity of the leaf. C4 plants can produce more sugar than C3 plants in conditions of high light and temperature. Many important crop plants are C4 plants, including maize, sorghum, sugarcane, and millet. Plants that do not use PEP-carboxylase in carbon fixation are called C3 plants because the primary carboxylation reaction, catalyzed by RuBisCO, produces the three-carbon 3-phosphoglyceric acids directly in the Calvin-Benson cycle. Over 90% of plants use C3 carbon fixation, compared to 3% that use C4 carbon fixation; however, the evolution of C4 in over sixty plant lineages makes it a striking example of convergent evolution. C2 photosynthesis, which involves carbon-concentration by selective breakdown of photorespiratory glycine, is both an evolutionary precursor to C4 and a useful carbon-concentrating mechanism in its own right.

Xerophytes, such as cacti and most succulents, also use PEP carboxylase to capture carbon dioxide in a process called Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM). In contrast to C4 metabolism, which spatially separates the CO2 fixation to PEP from the Calvin cycle, CAM temporally separates these two processes. CAM plants have a different leaf anatomy from C3 plants, and fix the CO2 at night, when their stomata are open. CAM plants store the CO2 mostly in the form of malic acid via carboxylation of phosphoenolpyruvate to oxaloacetate, which is then reduced to malate. Decarboxylation of malate during the day releases CO2 inside the leaves, thus allowing carbon fixation to 3-phosphoglycerate by RuBisCO. CAM is used by 16,000 species of plants.

Calcium-oxalate-accumulating plants, such as Amaranthus hybridus and Colobanthus quitensis, show a variation of photosynthesis where calcium oxalate crystals function as dynamic carbon pools, supplying carbon dioxide (CO2) to photosynthetic cells when stomata are partially or totally closed. This process was named alarm photosynthesis. Under stress conditions (e.g., water deficit), oxalate released from calcium oxalate crystals is converted to CO2 by an oxalate oxidase enzyme, and the produced CO2 can support the Calvin cycle reactions. Reactive hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), the byproduct of oxalate oxidase reaction, can be neutralized by catalase. Alarm photosynthesis represents a photosynthetic variant to be added to the well-known C4 and CAM pathways. However, alarm photosynthesis, in contrast to these pathways, operates as a biochemical pump that collects carbon from the organ interior (or from the soil) and not from the atmosphere.

In water

Cyanobacteria possess carboxysomes, which increase the concentration of CO2 around RuBisCO to increase the rate of photosynthesis. An enzyme, carbonic anhydrase, located within the carboxysome, releases CO2 from dissolved hydrocarbonate ions (HCO
3). Before the CO2 can diffuse out, RuBisCO concentrated within the carboxysome quickly sponges it up. HCO
3 ions are made from CO2 outside the cell by another carbonic anhydrase and are actively pumped into the cell by a membrane protein. They cannot cross the membrane as they are charged, and within the cytosol they turn back into CO2 very slowly without the help of carbonic anhydrase. This causes the HCO
3 ions to accumulate within the cell from where they diffuse into the carboxysomes. Pyrenoids in algae and hornworts also act to concentrate CO2 around RuBisCO.

Order and kinetics

The overall process of photosynthesis takes place in four stages:

Stage Event Site Time scale
1 Energy transfer in antenna chlorophyll Thylakoid membranes in the chloroplasts Femtosecond to picosecond
2 Transfer of electrons in photochemical reactions Picosecond to nanosecond
3 Electron transport chain and ATP synthesis Microsecond to millisecond
4 Carbon fixation and export of stable products Stroma of the chloroplasts and the cell cytosol Millisecond to second

Efficiency

Main article: Photosynthetic efficiency

Plants usually convert light into chemical energy with a photosynthetic efficiency of 3–6%. Absorbed light that is unconverted is dissipated primarily as heat, with a small fraction (1–2%) reemitted as chlorophyll fluorescence at longer (redder) wavelengths. This fact allows measurement of the light reaction of photosynthesis by using chlorophyll fluorometers.

Actual plants' photosynthetic efficiency varies with the frequency of the light being converted, light intensity, temperature, and proportion of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, and can vary from 0.1% to 8%. By comparison, solar panels convert light into electric energy at an efficiency of approximately 6–20% for mass-produced panels, and above 40% in laboratory devices. Scientists are studying photosynthesis in hopes of developing plants with increased yield.

The efficiency of both light and dark reactions can be measured, but the relationship between the two can be complex. For example, the light reaction creates ATP and NADPH energy molecules, which C3 plants can use for carbon fixation or photorespiration. Electrons may also flow to other electron sinks. For this reason, it is not uncommon for authors to differentiate between work done under non-photorespiratory conditions and under photorespiratory conditions.

Chlorophyll fluorescence of photosystem II can measure the light reaction, and infrared gas analyzers can measure the dark reaction. An integrated chlorophyll fluorometer and gas exchange system can investigate both light and dark reactions when researchers use the two separate systems together. Infrared gas analyzers and some moisture sensors are sensitive enough to measure the photosynthetic assimilation of CO2 and of ΔH2O using reliable methods. CO2 is commonly measured in μmols/(m/s), parts per million, or volume per million; and H2O is commonly measured in mmols/(m/s) or in mbars. By measuring CO2 assimilation, ΔH2O, leaf temperature, barometric pressure, leaf area, and photosynthetically active radiation (PAR), it becomes possible to estimate, "A" or carbon assimilation, "E" or transpiration, "gs" or stomatal conductance, and "Ci" or intracellular CO2. However, it is more common to use chlorophyll fluorescence for plant stress measurement, where appropriate, because the most commonly used parameters FV/FM and Y(II) or F/FM' can be measured in a few seconds, allowing the investigation of larger plant populations.

Gas exchange systems that offer control of CO2 levels, above and below ambient, allow the common practice of measurement of A/Ci curves, at different CO2 levels, to characterize a plant's photosynthetic response.

Integrated chlorophyll fluorometer – gas exchange systems allow a more precise measure of photosynthetic response and mechanisms. While standard gas exchange photosynthesis systems can measure Ci, or substomatal CO2 levels, the addition of integrated chlorophyll fluorescence measurements allows a more precise measurement of CC, the estimation of CO2 concentration at the site of carboxylation in the chloroplast, to replace Ci. CO2 concentration in the chloroplast becomes possible to estimate with the measurement of mesophyll conductance or gm using an integrated system.

Photosynthesis measurement systems are not designed to directly measure the amount of light the leaf absorbs, but analysis of chlorophyll fluorescence, P700- and P515-absorbance, and gas exchange measurements reveal detailed information about, e.g., the photosystems, quantum efficiency and the CO2 assimilation rates. With some instruments, even wavelength dependency of the photosynthetic efficiency can be analyzed.

A phenomenon known as quantum walk increases the efficiency of the energy transport of light significantly. In the photosynthetic cell of an alga, bacterium, or plant, there are light-sensitive molecules called chromophores arranged in an antenna-shaped structure called a photocomplex. When a photon is absorbed by a chromophore, it is converted into a quasiparticle referred to as an exciton, which jumps from chromophore to chromophore towards the reaction center of the photocomplex, a collection of molecules that traps its energy in a chemical form accessible to the cell's metabolism. The exciton's wave properties enable it to cover a wider area and try out several possible paths simultaneously, allowing it to instantaneously "choose" the most efficient route, where it will have the highest probability of arriving at its destination in the minimum possible time.

Because that quantum walking takes place at temperatures far higher than quantum phenomena usually occur, it is only possible over very short distances. Obstacles in the form of destructive interference cause the particle to lose its wave properties for an instant before it regains them once again after it is freed from its locked position through a classic "hop". The movement of the electron towards the photo center is therefore covered in a series of conventional hops and quantum walks.

Evolution

Main article: Evolution of photosynthesis
Life timeline
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Earliest water
LUCA
Earliest fossils
LHB meteorites
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Pongola glaciation*
Atmospheric oxygen
Huronian glaciation*
Sexual reproduction
Earliest multicellular life
Earliest fungi
Earliest plants
Earliest animals
Cryogenian ice age*
Ediacaran biota
Cambrian explosion
Hirnantian glaciation*
Earliest tetrapods
Karoo ice age*
Earliest apes / humans
Quaternary ice age*
(million years ago)*Ice Ages

Fossils of what are thought to be filamentous photosynthetic organisms have been dated at 3.4 billion years old. More recent studies also suggest that photosynthesis may have begun about 3.4 billion years ago, though the first direct evidence of photosynthesis comes from thylakoid membranes preserved in 1.75-billion-year-old cherts.

Oxygenic photosynthesis is the main source of oxygen in the Earth's atmosphere, and its earliest appearance is sometimes referred to as the oxygen catastrophe. Geological evidence suggests that oxygenic photosynthesis, such as that in cyanobacteria, became important during the Paleoproterozoic era around two billion years ago. Modern photosynthesis in plants and most photosynthetic prokaryotes is oxygenic, using water as an electron donor, which is oxidized to molecular oxygen in the photosynthetic reaction center.

Symbiosis and the origin of chloroplasts

Plant cells with visible chloroplasts (from a moss, Plagiomnium affine)

Several groups of animals have formed symbiotic relationships with photosynthetic algae. These are most common in corals, sponges, and sea anemones. Scientists presume that this is due to the particularly simple body plans and large surface areas of these animals compared to their volumes. In addition, a few marine mollusks, such as Elysia viridis and Elysia chlorotica, also maintain a symbiotic relationship with chloroplasts they capture from the algae in their diet and then store in their bodies (see Kleptoplasty). This allows the mollusks to survive solely by photosynthesis for several months at a time. Some of the genes from the plant cell nucleus have even been transferred to the slugs, so that the chloroplasts can be supplied with proteins they need to survive.

An even closer form of symbiosis may explain the origin of chloroplasts. Chloroplasts have many similarities with photosynthetic bacteria, including a circular chromosome, prokaryotic-type ribosome, and similar proteins in the photosynthetic reaction center. The endosymbiotic theory suggests that photosynthetic bacteria were acquired (by endocytosis) by early eukaryotic cells to form the first plant cells. Therefore, chloroplasts may be photosynthetic bacteria that adapted to life inside plant cells. Like mitochondria, chloroplasts possess their own DNA, separate from the nuclear DNA of their plant host cells and the genes in this chloroplast DNA resemble those found in cyanobacteria. DNA in chloroplasts codes for redox proteins such as those found in the photosynthetic reaction centers. The CoRR Hypothesis proposes that this co-location of genes with their gene products is required for redox regulation of gene expression, and accounts for the persistence of DNA in bioenergetic organelles.

Photosynthetic eukaryotic lineages

Symbiotic and kleptoplastic organisms excluded:

Except for the euglenids, which are found within the Excavata, all of these belong to the Diaphoretickes. Archaeplastida and the photosynthetic Paulinella got their plastids, which are surrounded by two membranes, through primary endosymbiosis in two separate events, by engulfing a cyanobacterium. The plastids in all the other groups have either a red or green algal origin, and are referred to as the "red lineages" and the "green lineages". The only known exception is the ciliate Pseudoblepharisma tenue, which in addition to its plastids that originated from green algae also has a purple sulfur bacterium as symbiont. In dinoflagellates and euglenids the plastids are surrounded by three membranes, and in the remaining lines by four. A nucleomorph, remnants of the original algal nucleus located between the inner and outer membranes of the plastid, is present in the cryptophytes (from a red alga) and chlorarachniophytes (from a green alga). Some dinoflagellates that lost their photosynthetic ability later regained it again through new endosymbiotic events with different algae. While able to perform photosynthesis, many of these eukaryotic groups are mixotrophs and practice heterotrophy to various degrees.

Photosynthetic prokaryotic lineages

Early photosynthetic systems, such as those in green and purple sulfur and green and purple nonsulfur bacteria, are thought to have been anoxygenic, and used various other molecules than water as electron donors. Green and purple sulfur bacteria are thought to have used hydrogen and sulfur as electron donors. Green nonsulfur bacteria used various amino and other organic acids as electron donors. Purple nonsulfur bacteria used a variety of nonspecific organic molecules. The use of these molecules is consistent with the geological evidence that Earth's early atmosphere was highly reducing at that time.

With a possible exception of Heimdallarchaeota, photosynthesis is not found in archaea. Haloarchaea are phototrophic and can absorb energy from the sun, but do not harvest carbon from the atmosphere and are therefore not photosynthetic. Instead of chlorophyll they use rhodopsins, which convert light-energy to ion gradients but cannot mediate electron transfer reactions.

In bacteria eight photosynthetic lineages are currently known:

Cyanobacteria and the evolution of photosynthesis

The biochemical capacity to use water as the source for electrons in photosynthesis evolved once, in a common ancestor of extant cyanobacteria (formerly called blue-green algae). The geological record indicates that this transforming event took place early in Earth's history, at least 2450–2320 million years ago (Ma), and, it is speculated, much earlier. Because the Earth's atmosphere contained almost no oxygen during the estimated development of photosynthesis, it is believed that the first photosynthetic cyanobacteria did not generate oxygen. Available evidence from geobiological studies of Archean (>2500 Ma) sedimentary rocks indicates that life existed 3500 Ma, but the question of when oxygenic photosynthesis evolved is still unanswered. A clear paleontological window on cyanobacterial evolution opened about 2000 Ma, revealing an already-diverse biota of cyanobacteria. Cyanobacteria remained the principal primary producers of oxygen throughout the Proterozoic Eon (2500–543 Ma), in part because the redox structure of the oceans favored photoautotrophs capable of nitrogen fixation. Green algae joined cyanobacteria as the major primary producers of oxygen on continental shelves near the end of the Proterozoic, but only with the Mesozoic (251–66 Ma) radiations of dinoflagellates, coccolithophorids, and diatoms did the primary production of oxygen in marine shelf waters take modern form. Cyanobacteria remain critical to marine ecosystems as primary producers of oxygen in oceanic gyres, as agents of biological nitrogen fixation, and, in modified form, as the plastids of marine algae.

Experimental history

Discovery

Although some of the steps in photosynthesis are still not completely understood, the overall photosynthetic equation has been known since the 19th century.

Portrait of Jan Baptist van Helmont by Mary Beale, c. 1674

Jan van Helmont began the research of the process in the mid-17th century when he carefully measured the mass of the soil a plant was using and the mass of the plant as it grew. After noticing that the soil mass changed very little, he hypothesized that the mass of the growing plant must come from the water, the only substance he added to the potted plant. His hypothesis was partially accurate – much of the gained mass comes from carbon dioxide as well as water. However, this was a signaling point to the idea that the bulk of a plant's biomass comes from the inputs of photosynthesis, not the soil itself.

Joseph Priestley, a chemist and minister, discovered that when he isolated a volume of air under an inverted jar and burned a candle in it (which gave off CO2), the candle would burn out very quickly, much before it ran out of wax. He further discovered that a mouse could similarly "injure" air. He then showed that a plant could restore the air the candle and the mouse had "injured."

In 1779, Jan Ingenhousz repeated Priestley's experiments. He discovered that it was the influence of sunlight on the plant that could cause it to revive a mouse in a matter of hours.

In 1796, Jean Senebier, a Swiss pastor, botanist, and naturalist, demonstrated that green plants consume carbon dioxide and release oxygen under the influence of light. Soon afterward, Nicolas-Théodore de Saussure showed that the increase in mass of the plant as it grows could not be due only to uptake of CO2 but also to the incorporation of water. Thus, the basic reaction by which organisms use photosynthesis to produce food (such as glucose) was outlined.

Refinements

Cornelis Van Niel made key discoveries explaining the chemistry of photosynthesis. By studying purple sulfur bacteria and green bacteria, he was the first to demonstrate that photosynthesis is a light-dependent redox reaction in which hydrogen reduces (donates its atoms as electrons and protons to) carbon dioxide.

Robert Emerson discovered two light reactions by testing plant productivity using different wavelengths of light. With the red alone, the light reactions were suppressed. When blue and red were combined, the output was much more substantial. Thus, there were two photosystems, one absorbing up to 600 nm wavelengths, the other up to 700 nm. The former is known as PSII, the latter is PSI. PSI contains only chlorophyll "a", PSII contains primarily chlorophyll "a" with most of the available chlorophyll "b", among other pigments. These include phycobilins, which are the red and blue pigments of red and blue algae, respectively, and fucoxanthol for brown algae and diatoms. The process is most productive when the absorption of quanta is equal in both PSII and PSI, assuring that input energy from the antenna complex is divided between the PSI and PSII systems, which in turn powers the photochemistry.

Robert Hill thought that a complex of reactions consisted of an intermediate to cytochrome b6 (now a plastoquinone), and that another was from cytochrome f to a step in the carbohydrate-generating mechanisms. These are linked by plastoquinone, which does require energy to reduce cytochrome f. Further experiments to prove that the oxygen developed during the photosynthesis of green plants came from water were performed by Hill in 1937 and 1939. He showed that isolated chloroplasts give off oxygen in the presence of unnatural reducing agents like iron oxalate, ferricyanide or benzoquinone after exposure to light. In the Hill reaction:

2 H2O + 2 A + (light, chloroplasts) → 2 AH2 + O2

A is the electron acceptor. Therefore, in light, the electron acceptor is reduced and oxygen is evolved. Samuel Ruben and Martin Kamen used radioactive isotopes to determine that the oxygen liberated in photosynthesis came from the water.

Melvin Calvin works in his photosynthesis laboratory.

Melvin Calvin and Andrew Benson, along with James Bassham, elucidated the path of carbon assimilation (the photosynthetic carbon reduction cycle) in plants. The carbon reduction cycle is known as the Calvin cycle, but many scientists refer to it as the Calvin-Benson, Benson-Calvin, or even Calvin-Benson-Bassham (or CBB) Cycle.

Nobel Prize–winning scientist Rudolph A. Marcus was later able to discover the function and significance of the electron transport chain.

Otto Heinrich Warburg and Dean Burk discovered the I-quantum photosynthesis reaction that splits CO2, activated by the respiration.

In 1950, first experimental evidence for the existence of photophosphorylation in vivo was presented by Otto Kandler using intact Chlorella cells and interpreting his findings as light-dependent ATP formation. In 1954, Daniel I. Arnon et al. discovered photophosphorylation in vitro in isolated chloroplasts with the help of P.

Louis N. M. Duysens and Jan Amesz discovered that chlorophyll "a" will absorb one light, oxidize cytochrome f, while chlorophyll "a" (and other pigments) will absorb another light but will reduce this same oxidized cytochrome, stating the two light reactions are in series.

Development of the concept

In 1893, the American botanist Charles Reid Barnes proposed two terms, photosyntax and photosynthesis, for the biological process of synthesis of complex carbon compounds out of carbonic acid, in the presence of chlorophyll, under the influence of light. The term photosynthesis is derived from the Greek phōs (φῶς, gleam) and sýnthesis (σύνθεσις, arranging together), while another word that he designated was photosyntax, from sýntaxis (σύνταξις, configuration). Over time, the term photosynthesis came into common usage. Later discovery of anoxygenic photosynthetic bacteria and photophosphorylation necessitated redefinition of the term.

C3 : C4 photosynthesis research

In the late 1940s at the University of California, Berkeley, the details of photosynthetic carbon metabolism were sorted out by the chemists Melvin Calvin, Andrew Benson, James Bassham and a score of students and researchers utilizing the carbon-14 isotope and paper chromatography techniques. The pathway of CO2 fixation by the algae Chlorella in a fraction of a second in light resulted in a three carbon molecule called phosphoglyceric acid (PGA). For that original and ground-breaking work, a Nobel Prize in Chemistry was awarded to Melvin Calvin in 1961. In parallel, plant physiologists studied leaf gas exchanges using the new method of infrared gas analysis and a leaf chamber where the net photosynthetic rates ranged from 10 to 13 μmol CO2·m·s, with the conclusion that all terrestrial plants have the same photosynthetic capacities, that are light saturated at less than 50% of sunlight.

Later in 1958–1963 at Cornell University, field grown maize was reported to have much greater leaf photosynthetic rates of 40 μmol CO2·m·s and not be saturated at near full sunlight. This higher rate in maize was almost double of those observed in other species such as wheat and soybean, indicating that large differences in photosynthesis exist among higher plants. At the University of Arizona, detailed gas exchange research on more than 15 species of monocots and dicots uncovered for the first time that differences in leaf anatomy are crucial factors in differentiating photosynthetic capacities among species. In tropical grasses, including maize, sorghum, sugarcane, Bermuda grass and in the dicot amaranthus, leaf photosynthetic rates were around 38−40 μmol CO2·m·s, and the leaves have two types of green cells, i.e. outer layer of mesophyll cells surrounding a tightly packed cholorophyllous vascular bundle sheath cells. This type of anatomy was termed Kranz anatomy in the 19th century by the botanist Gottlieb Haberlandt while studying leaf anatomy of sugarcane. Plant species with the greatest photosynthetic rates and Kranz anatomy showed no apparent photorespiration, very low CO2 compensation point, high optimum temperature, high stomatal resistances and lower mesophyll resistances for gas diffusion and rates never saturated at full sun light. The research at Arizona was designated a Citation Classic in 1986. These species were later termed C4 plants as the first stable compound of CO2 fixation in light has four carbons as malate and aspartate. Other species that lack Kranz anatomy were termed C3 type such as cotton and sunflower, as the first stable carbon compound is the three-carbon PGA. At 1000 ppm CO2 in measuring air, both the C3 and C4 plants had similar leaf photosynthetic rates around 60 μmol CO2·m·s indicating the suppression of photorespiration in C3 plants.

Factors

The leaf is the primary site of photosynthesis in plants.

There are four main factors influencing photosynthesis and several corollary factors. The four main are:

Total photosynthesis is limited by a range of environmental factors. These include the amount of light available, the amount of leaf area a plant has to capture light (shading by other plants is a major limitation of photosynthesis), the rate at which carbon dioxide can be supplied to the chloroplasts to support photosynthesis, the availability of water, and the availability of suitable temperatures for carrying out photosynthesis.

Light intensity (irradiance), wavelength and temperature

See also: PI (photosynthesis-irradiance) curve
Absorbance spectra of free chlorophyll a (blue) and b (red) in a solvent. The action spectra of chlorophyll molecules are slightly modified in vivo depending on specific pigment–protein interactions.

The process of photosynthesis provides the main input of free energy into the biosphere, and is one of four main ways in which radiation is important for plant life.

The radiation climate within plant communities is extremely variable, in both time and space.

In the early 20th century, Frederick Blackman and Gabrielle Matthaei investigated the effects of light intensity (irradiance) and temperature on the rate of carbon assimilation.

  • At constant temperature, the rate of carbon assimilation varies with irradiance, increasing as the irradiance increases, but reaching a plateau at higher irradiance.
  • At low irradiance, increasing the temperature has little influence on the rate of carbon assimilation. At constant high irradiance, the rate of carbon assimilation increases as the temperature is increased.

These two experiments illustrate several important points: First, it is known that, in general, photochemical reactions are not affected by temperature. However, these experiments clearly show that temperature affects the rate of carbon assimilation, so there must be two sets of reactions in the full process of carbon assimilation. These are the light-dependent 'photochemical' temperature-independent stage, and the light-independent, temperature-dependent stage. Second, Blackman's experiments illustrate the concept of limiting factors. Another limiting factor is the wavelength of light. Cyanobacteria, which reside several meters underwater, cannot receive the correct wavelengths required to cause photoinduced charge separation in conventional photosynthetic pigments. To combat this problem, Cyanobacteria have a light-harvesting complex called Phycobilisome. This complex is made up of a series of proteins with different pigments which surround the reaction center.

Carbon dioxide levels and photorespiration

Photorespiration

As carbon dioxide concentrations rise, the rate at which sugars are made by the light-independent reactions increases until limited by other factors. RuBisCO, the enzyme that captures carbon dioxide in the light-independent reactions, has a binding affinity for both carbon dioxide and oxygen. When the concentration of carbon dioxide is high, RuBisCO will fix carbon dioxide. However, if the carbon dioxide concentration is low, RuBisCO will bind oxygen instead of carbon dioxide. This process, called photorespiration, uses energy, but does not produce sugars.

RuBisCO oxygenase activity is disadvantageous to plants for several reasons:

  1. One product of oxygenase activity is phosphoglycolate (2 carbon) instead of 3-phosphoglycerate (3 carbon). Phosphoglycolate cannot be metabolized by the Calvin-Benson cycle and represents carbon lost from the cycle. A high oxygenase activity, therefore, drains the sugars that are required to recycle ribulose 5-bisphosphate and for the continuation of the Calvin-Benson cycle.
  2. Phosphoglycolate is quickly metabolized to glycolate that is toxic to a plant at a high concentration; it inhibits photosynthesis.
  3. Salvaging glycolate is an energetically expensive process that uses the glycolate pathway, and only 75% of the carbon is returned to the Calvin-Benson cycle as 3-phosphoglycerate. The reactions also produce ammonia (NH3), which is able to diffuse out of the plant, leading to a loss of nitrogen.
A highly simplified summary is:
2 glycolate + ATP → 3-phosphoglycerate + carbon dioxide + ADP + NH3

The salvaging pathway for the products of RuBisCO oxygenase activity is more commonly known as photorespiration, since it is characterized by light-dependent oxygen consumption and the release of carbon dioxide.

See also

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