Photosynthesis POGIL Answer Key
Photosynthesis POGIL Answer Key
Why?
Plants are the original solar panels. Through photosynthesis a plant is able to convert electromagnetic
(light) energy into chemical energy. This energy is used not only to keep the plant alive, but also to sustain
all creatures that rely on the plant for food and shelter. Plants and photosynthetic algae are also the source
of all oxygen on Earth, allowing the inhabitants of Earth to benefit from our most plentiful renewable
energy resource.
Model 1 – Chloroplast
- The chloroplast.
- Chlorophyll
b. Where in the organelle are these molecules stored before they are used in photosynthesis?
- In the stroma
- Sunlight
- In the thykaloid
5. Considering your answers to Question 4, what compound is best able to absorb the light energy
from the Sun and convert it into chemical energy?
- Chlorophyll
6. What substances are produced during photosynthesis? Include the name and chemical formula of
each substance in your answer.
B A
C
8. In Model 2, what shape or symbol represents a single electron?
9. In the light-dependent reactions electrons are released from molecules in two ways.
a. Find two places in Model 2 where electrons are released from chlorophyll by a photon of light
coming from the Sun.
- Through the stroma and Photosynthesis 1 and 2
b. Find one place in Model 2 where electrons are released from water molecules.
- Through the inner thylakoid in photosynthesis 2
c. When the electrons are released from water molecules, what other products are
formed?
Read This!
The light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis include three major processes:
+
A. Excited electrons leave chlorophyll and reduce NADP into NADPH.
B. Excited electrons moving through the electron transport chain provide the free energy needed
to pump hydrogen ions into the inner thylakoid.
C. Hydrogen ions flowing out of the thylakoid via a protein channel provide the free energy
needed to convert ADP to ATP.
10. In Model 2, label the diagram with “A,” “B,” and “C” to indicate where the three steps in the
Read This! box are occurring.
- Done
11. The light-dependent reactions include an electron transport chain system that works in a very
similar fashion to the electron transport chain in respiration. Briefly describe how this system
works and what job it performs in the light-dependent reactions. (Your answer should include a
discussion about concentration gradient.)
- The ETC uses energy from excess electrons to move H + ions against their concentration
gradient, creating a high concentration of H+ within the thylakoid membrane.
12. Refer to Model 2.
a. Name the embedded protein complex found in the thylakoid membrane that uses excited
+
electrons to reduce NADP into NADPH.
- Photosystem 1
b. Name the embedded protein complex found in the thylakoid membrane that provides excited
electrons to the electron transport chain.
- Photosystem 2
c. Name the embedded protein complex found in the thylakoid membrane that converts ADP
to ATP using free energy from a flow of hydrogen ions.
- ATP Synthase
13. Once a chlorophyll molecule has released electrons it is no longer useful until those electrons are
replaced.
a. According to Model 2, what is the source of replacement electrons for those released from
photosystem I?
- The electrons from ETC path
b. According to Model 2, what is the source of replacement electrons for those released from
photosystem II?
- The electrons from splitting water molecules
- No
b. In the photosynthesis reaction in Model 1, twelve water molecules are shown as reactants, but
six water molecules are shown as products. Are any of the twelve water molecules products of
the light-dependent reactions?
- No
c. Calculate the total number of oxygen, NADPH, and ATP molecules that are produced when
twelve water molecules complete the light-dependent reactions.
16. Where do the ATP and NADPH produced during the light-dependent reactions go when the
process is complete?
17. According to Model 3, what are the three phases of the Calvin cycle?
- 5 carbon atoms
c. Calculate the total number of carbon atoms represented in all of the RuBP molecules used in
one turn of the Calvin cycle.
- 15 carbon molecules
19. Ribulose biphosphate (RuBP) combines with carbon dioxide (CO2 ) to form phosphoglycerate
…………………….(PGA) during the carbon fixation phase of the Calvin cycle.
a. How many CO2 molecules are used in one turn of the Calvin cycle?
- 3 CO2 molecules
b. How many PGA molecules are made in one turn of the Calvin cycle?
- 6 PGA molecules
- 3 carbon atoms
d. Calculate the total number of carbon atoms represented in all of the PGA molecules used in
one turn of the Calvin cycle.
- 18 carbon molecules.
20. Explain what happened to the carbon atoms from the carbon dioxide molecules that entered the
Calvin cycle.
21. Consider the term “carbon fixation.” Think individually for a moment what this term might
mean, then share ideas among the group. Record the group’s consensus definition for carbon
fixation here.
- Carbon fixation is the process in which carbon atoms get removed from the atmosphere and are
…………...reincorporated into larger molecules with a system.
Read This!
Model 3 is a simplified version of the Calvin cycle. Each of the three phases in the cycle consist of
multiple reactions that are catalyzed by enzymes specific to that reaction. These enzymes have names
like RuBisCo, phosphoglycerate kinase, and PGAL hydrogenase.
- PGAL
b. Describe specifically how the structures of the two molecules in part a are different.
- When PGA lose one oxygen atom, they turn into PGAL
c. Identify the types and numbers of molecules that provide the free energy necessary for the
reduction of the PGA molecules.
d. Is the total number of carbon atoms present in the Calvin cycle changed during the
………reduction phase? Support your answer with evidence from Model 3.
- No, the amount of oxygen molecules between PGA and PGAL stay the same, keeping the
carbon the same between the molecules.
- 6
b. Explain where the hydrogen and oxygen atoms in these water molecules originated.
- When PGA is formed into PGAL, it losses an oxygen and allowed for it to be repurposed into
……………………….water, then the hydrogen comes from the conversion of NADP+ to NADPH
a. How many PGAL molecules continue on to the regeneration phase of the Calvin cycle?
- 5 PGAL molecules
b. Identify the types and numbers of molecules that provide the free energy necessary for the
regeneration of these molecules.
- 3 ATP molecules
c. How many total carbon atoms remain in the Calvin cycle at this point?
- 15 carbon molecules
d. What molecule(s) are “regenerated” in this phase of the cycle?
- 3 RuBP molecules
e. How many total carbon atoms leave the Calvin cycle before the regeneration phase?
- 3 carbon molecules
f. What happens to the PGAL molecule that does not continue on in the Calvin cycle?
Read This!
As you have learned from your careful study of the Calvin cycle illustrated in Model 3, three atoms of carbon
enter the cycle as carbon dioxide and three carbon atoms leave the cycle as PGAL. It is easy to assume that
the three atoms that leave are one and the same with the three that entered, but that is incorrect. It
may be that none of the carbon atoms from the carbon dioxide become incorporated into a molecule of
PGAL that leaves the cycle. Alternatively, it is also possible that one of the carbon atoms from the carbon
dioxide will become part of a PGAL molecule that leaves the cycle. Eventually all of the carbon atoms that
entering the cycle will leave as part of a PGAL molecule, but they must wait their turn.
25. The reaction in Model 1 shows glucose (C6 H12O6) as a product of photosynthesis.
a. How many PGAL molecules will it take to make one molecule of glucose? Justify your
answer with a discussion of numbers of carbon atoms.
- 2 PGAL molecules because they each contain 3 carbon molecules, but glucose requires
six, therefore 2 are needed.
b. How many turns of the Calvin cycle will it take to make one molecule of glucose?
- 2 turns
c. Calculate the total number of ATP and NADPH molecules used in the production of one
molecule of glucose.
- 18 AIP and 12 NADPH molecules are required for one molecule of glucose
26. Where do the ADP and NADP+ go after they are used in the Calvin cycle?
- They are recycled back into the Calvin cycle
27. Explain in detail, using complete sentences, how the two reactions (light-dependent and light-
independent) depend on each other.
- The light cycle is what creates the free energy 1& AlP and 12 NADPH) for the Tight
independent cycle, which are then returned and recycled back into the light dependent cycle
28.Under each molecule in the equation below, indicate whether it is involved (either used orproduced)
in the light-dependent reactions or the Calvin cycle.
Calvin cycle Light dependent Calvin cycle Light dependent Calvin cycle
Cycle Cycle
29. Throughout photosynthesis, energy is transferred from light to several molecules with increase-
ingly higher potential energy. Use the words below to summarize the order in which the energy flow
occurs.
30. Although photosynthesis does produce some ATP, these molecules are not used to do the work
of the plant cells. What other process occurs in the cells that provides the ATP necessary to do
cellular work such as making proteins, dividing cells, and moving substances across membranes?
- Cellular respiration