Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://repository.kln.ac.lk/handle/123456789/15756
Title: Photosynthesis: Synthesis of what?
Authors: Gunawardane, M.M.
Keywords: Photosynthesis
Light reaction
Dark reaction
Autotrophy
Issue Date: 2016
Publisher: Faculty of Science, University of Kelaniya, Sri Lanka
Citation: Gunawardane, M.M. 2016. Photosynthesis: Synthesis of what? In Proceedings of the International Research Symposium on Pure and Applied Sciences (IRSPAS 2016), Faculty of Science, University of Kelaniya, Sri Lanka. p 100.
Abstract: The term photosynthesis is often used to mean the entire chain of biochemical reactions, which is initiated by light and concluded by the synthesis of carbohydrates. This series of reactions has two clearly distinct stages. First, there is the synthesis of ATP and reduced coenzymes (e.g. NADPH) with the help of light energy. Next, ATP and a reduced coenzyme are used in the synthesis of carbohydrates (e.g. starch) from CO2. As the first stage involves light, it is known as the light reaction of photosynthesis, while the second stage, which does not require light, is known as the dark reaction of photosynthesis. The dark reaction in nature is not a process necessarily dependent on a photomediated activity, the light reaction. What dark reaction needs for the reduction of CO2 into organic carbon is a reduced coenzyme and ATP, and the source of those compounds does not necessarily have to be the light reaction. This review proposes that the dark reaction should not be described as part of photosynthesis. Dark reaction is not a process limited to organisms that use photo energy to produce ATP and reduced coenzymes. In fact, without any dependence on photo energy, it happens in nature in some non-photosynthetic chemotrophic organisms as well. Thus, the light reaction is not an essential precondition for the dark reaction. Furthermore, ATP and reduced coenzymes synthesized by the light reaction in nature are not entirely used for the dark reaction. As such, the light reaction is not an activity that leads only to the dark reaction. Since the dark reaction can occur independently from any photo-driven synthesis process, it should not be described as part of photosynthesis. Therefore, the term photosynthesis should be confined to describe only the light reaction, defining photosynthesis as the process in nature that synthesizes ATP and reduced coenzymes using light energy. Dark reaction, which describes fixation of CO2 in to organic compounds, is an activity carried out by photosynthetic organisms and certain chemolithotrophic bacteria as well. It can be appropriately described by the term autotrophy, defining it as the primary production of carbohydrates in the biosphere.
URI: http://repository.kln.ac.lk/handle/123456789/15756
ISBN: 978-955-704-008-0
Appears in Collections:IRSPAS 2016

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