Nature's smallest factory: The Calvin cycle - Cathy Symington

2,946,236 views ・ 2014-04-01

TED-Ed


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You're facing a giant bowl
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of energy packed Carbon Crunchies.
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One spoonful. Two. Three.
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Soon, you're powered up by the energy surge
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that comes from your meal.
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But how did that energy get into your bowl?
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Energy exists in the form of sugars
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made by the plant your cereal came from,
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like wheat or corn.
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As you can see, carbon is the chemical backbone,
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and plants get their fix of it
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in the form of carbon dioxide, CO2,
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from the air that we all breath.
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But how does a plant's energy factory,
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housed in the stroma of the chloroplast,
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turn a one carbon gas, like CO2,
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into a six carbon solid, like glucose?
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If you're thinking photosynthesis, you're right.
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But photosynthesis is divided into two steps.
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The first, which stores energy from the sun
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in the form of adenosine triphosphate, or ATP.
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And the second, the Calvin cycle, that captures carbon
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and turns it into sugar.
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This second phase represents one of nature's
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most sustainable production lines.
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And so with that, welcome to world's most miniscule factory.
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The starting materials?
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A mix of CO2 molecules from the air,
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and preassembled molecules called
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ribulose biphosphate, or RuBP,
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each containing five carbons.
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The initiator? An industrious enzyme named rubisco
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that welds one carbon atom from a CO2 molecule
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with the RuBP chain
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to build an initial six carbon sequence.
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That rapidly splits into two shorter chains
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containing three carbons each
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and called phosphoglycerates, or PGAs, for short.
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Enter ATP, and another chemical called
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nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate,
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or just NADPH.
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ATP, working like a lubricant, delivers energy,
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while NADPH affixes one hydrogen to each of the PGA chains,
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changing them into molecules called
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glyceraldehyde 3 phosphates, or G3Ps.
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Glucose needs six carbons to form,
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made from two molecules of G3P,
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which incidentally have six carbons between them.
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So, sugar has just been manufactured, right?
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Not quite.
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The Calvin cycle works like a sustainable production line,
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meaning that those original RuBPs
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that kicked things off at the start,
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need to be recreated by reusing materials
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within the cycle now.
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But each RuBP needs five carbons
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and manufacturing glucose takes a whole six.
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Something doesn't add up.
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The answer lies in one phenomenal fact.
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While we've been focusing on this single production line,
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five others have been happening at the same time.
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With six conveyor belts moving in unison,
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there isn't just one carbon that gets soldered
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to one RuBP chain,
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but six carbons soldered to six RuBPs.
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That creates 12 G3P chains instead of just two,
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meaning that all together, 36 carbons exist:
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the precise number needed to manufacture sugar,
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and rebuild those RuBPs.
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Of the 12 G3Ps pooled together,
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two are siphoned off to form
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that energy rich six carbon glucose chain.
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The one fueling you via your breakfast. Success!
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But back on the manufacturing line,
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the byproducts of this sugar production
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are swiftly assembled to recreate those six RuBPs.
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That requires 30 carbons,
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the exact number contained by the remaining 10 G3PS.
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Now a molecular mix and match occurs.
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Two of the G3Ps are welded together
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forming a six carbon sequence.
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By adding a third G3P, a nine carbon chain is built.
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The first RuBP, made up of five carbons,
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is cast from this,
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leaving four carbons behind.
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But there's no wastage here.
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Those are soldered to a fourth G3P molecule,
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making a seven carbon chain.
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Added to a fifth G3P molecule,
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a ten carbon chain is created,
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enough now to craft two more RuBPs.
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With three full RuBPs recreated
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from five of the ten G3Ps,
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simply duplicating this process
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will renew the six RuBP chains
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needed to restart the cycle again.
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So the Calvin cycle generates the precise number
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of elements and processes
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required to keep this biochemical production line
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turning endlessly.
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And it's just one of the 100s of cycles
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present in nature.
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Why so many?
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Because if biological production processes were linear,
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they wouldn't be nearly as efficient or successful
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at using energy to manufacture the materials
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that nature relies upon, like sugar.
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Cycles create vital feedback loops
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that repeatedly reuse and rebuild ingredients
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crafting as much as possible
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out of the planet's available resources.
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Such as that sugar,
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built using raw sunlight and carbon
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converted in plant factories
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to become the energy that powers you
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and keeps the cycles revolving in your own life.
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