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Question
Describe C3 Pathway.
Solution
The cycle is divided into the following phases:
- Carboxylation phase: RuBP (Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate) accepts atmospheric CO2 in the presence of the enzyme RuBP carboxylase (RuB is CO) and forms a 6-carbon unstable compound. This unstable compound soon splits into two molecules of a 3-carbon compound called PGA (phosphoglyceric acid) in the presence of the same enzyme.
\[\ce{\underset{(5C)}{RuBP} + \underset{(1C)}{CO2} ->[Mg^{++}][RuBP Carboxylase] \underset{(6C)}{Unstable compound}}\]
\[\ce{\underset{(6C)}{Unstable compound} + H2O ->[Mg^{++}][RuBP Carboxylase] \underset{(3C)}{2 molecules of 3-PGA}}\] - Reduction phase (utilization of assimilatory power):
- The phosphoglyceric acid molecules are first phosphorylated by using ATP to produce 1,3 di-phosphoglyceric acid.
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It is then reduced by using NADPH2 to produce phosphoglyceraldehyde (PGAL) and inorganic phosphate is released.
\[\ce{3PGA + ATP -> 1,3-diphosphoglyceric acid + ADP}\]
\[\ce{1,3-diphosphoglyceric acid + NADPH2 -> 3PGAL + NADP + Pi}\] - Some molecules of 3 PGAL are converted into its isomer dihydroxyacetone phosphate (DHAP) in the presence of the enzyme triose phosphate isomerase.
- Synthesis of sugar and Regeneration phase:
- Synthesis of sugar:
- For the synthesis of one molecule of glucose, six molecules of RuBP and six molecules of CO2 are required, i.e. six turns of the Calvin cycle are required for the synthesis of one molecule of glucose.
- Out of 12 molecules of PGAL, 2 molecules (i.e. 1/6th part) are used for the synthesis of glucose.
- A molecule of PGAL and DHAP combine together to form a molecule of fructose 1, 6- diphosphate as shown below:
\[\ce{\underset{(3C)}{3 PGAL} + \underset{(3C)}{DHAP} -> \underset{(6C)}{Fructose-1,6-diphosphate}}\]
[Note: Fructose-1,6-diphosphate is the first carbohydrate formed during this process] - Fructose-1,6-diphosphate undergoes dephosphorylation to form fructose-6-phosphate which on isomerization forms glucose-6-phosphate.
- Glucose-6-phosphate undergoes dephosphorylation to form glucose. Glucose, thus formed is either utilized or stored as starch.
- Regeneration phase:
- RuBP gets regenerated through many biochemical reactions called sugar phosphate interconversions.
- All the intermediate compounds formed like erythrose-4-phosphate, xylulose-5-phosphate, ribose-5-phosphate, sedoheptulose-7-phosphate, etc. are sugar phosphates.
- Out of 12 molecules of PGAL, 10 molecules are utilized for the regeneration of 6 molecules of RuMP (ribulose monophosphate) which on phosphorylation form RuBP as shown below:
\[\ce{12 PGAL -> 6 RuMP}\] ....(1)
\[\ce{6 RuMP + 6 ATP -> 6 RuBP}\] ...(2) - Thus, RuBP, which is necessary for the reduction of CO2, is regenerated to keep the process going.
- Synthesis of sugar:
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