Dioxide Fixation in C4 Plants In temperate regions plants combine CO2 (carbon dioxide) directly with ribulose bisphosphate to form glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate (G3P), a stable, three-carbon (3C) intermediate in photosynthesis; hence this is the C3 pathway.
In hotter regions the stomata are kept closed for much of the time to reduce water loss. As a consequence, internal CO2 levels are low, and this combined with the high light levels would normally encourage photorespiration. However, C4 plants use an additional photosynthetic pathway to combine available CO2 with phosphoenol pyruvate (a 3C compound) to make 4C oxaloacetic acid instead of G3P. The 4C compound is then converted to malic acid which can be moved to and concentrated in tissues where conditions for photosynthesis are more favourable, such as tissues low in oxygen, during the night.© Microsoft Corporation. All Rights Reserved.
The dark reaction takes place in the stroma (matrix) of the chloroplast,
Sunday, December 27, 2009
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment