The light-independent reactions of photosynthesis take place in the stroma of the chloroplasts
The stroma is within the double membrane and is a thick protein rich environment containing the enzymes needed for the light-independent reactions
Carbon Fixation
The light-independent reactions of photosynthesis are also known as the Calvin cycle
Carbon dioxide is converted into carbohydrates, namely glucose, during the cycle in a series of anabolic reactions
Anabolic reactions require energy in order to build large complex molecules from smaller simpler ones
The Calvin cycle relies on the products of the light-dependent reactions namely ATP and reduced NADP
During the cycle endergonic reactions take place that involve the hydrolysis of ATP and oxidation of reduced NADP
An endergonic reaction requires energy to be absorbed before the reaction can proceed
There are three main steps within the Calvin cycle:
The enzyme rubisco catalyses the fixation of carbon dioxide by combination with a molecule of ribulose bisphosphate (RuBP), a 5C compound, to yield two molecules of glycerate 3-phosphate (GP), a 3C compound
GP is reduced to triose phosphate (TP) in a reaction involving reduced NADP and ATP
RuBP is regenerated from TP in reactions that use ATP
Carbon fixation
Carbon dioxide is the source of carbon for all organisms that carry out photosynthesis
Carbon fixation involves carbon dioxide (1C) being removed from the external environment and becoming part of the plant, and is then said to be “fixed”
It is transformed into a three-carbon compound (3C) called glycerate-3-phosphate (sometimes shortened to as GP)
During the fixation step of the Calvin cycle carbon dioxide is combined with a five-carbon compound (5C) called ribulose bisphosphate (RuBP) to make an unstable six-carbon (6C) compound that splits into two molecules of glycerate-3-phosphate
This reaction is catalysed by the enzyme rubisco
Glycerate-3-phosphate is then used in the next step of the cycle
Role of Reduced NADP and ATP
Energy from ATP and hydrogen from reduced NADP (from the light-dependent reactions) are used to reduceglycerate-3-phosphate to a phosphorylated three-carbon molecule called triose phosphate (sometimes shortened to TP)
After the reduction step one sixth of the triose phosphate is converted into usable products for the plant:
Hexose phosphates which can be used to produce carbohydrates such starch, sucrose or cellulose
Glycerol and fatty acids which join to form cell membranes
Production of amino acids for protein synthesis
It is important that not all the triose phosphate is converted to alternative compounds for the plant, or the supplies of ribulose bisphosphate would run out
The remaining triose phosphate is used to regenerate RuBP
Exam Tip
For the Calvin cycle to continue it needs a constant supply of RuBP and carbon dioxide. As much RuBP must be produced as is consumed. If three RuBP molecules are used then this generates six triose phosphates. Five of the triose phosphate molecules are needed to regenerate the three RuBPs molecules. So there would only be one left over to convert into other usable molecules for the plant (such as starch). To produce just one molecule of glucose, six turns of the Calvin cycle are needed.
Regeneration of RuBP
The remaining five sixths of triose phosphate are used to regenerate the four-carbon compound ribulose bisphosphate (RuBP)
This process requires ATP (from the light-dependent reaction)
Once RuBP been has regenerated it can go on to fix further carbon dioxide and the cycle can begin again
The Calvin cycle of the light-independent reactions showing the regeneration of RuBP