Biology, asked by pushpakala086, 11 months ago

c4 pathway? class 12 ! explain very briefly. don't spam

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Answered by anamikapradeep7
1

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Certain plants—including the important crops sugarcane and corn (maize), as well as other diverse species that are thought to have expanded their geographic ranges into tropical areas—have developed a special mechanism of carbon fixation that largely prevents photorespiration. The leaves of these plants have special anatomy and biochemistry. In particular, photosynthetic functions are divided between mesophyll and bundle-sheath leaf cells. The carbon-fixation pathway begins in the mesophyll cells, where carbon dioxide is converted into bicarbonate, which is then added to the three-carbon acid phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) by an enzyme called phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase. The product of this reaction is the four-carbon acid oxaloacetate, which is reduced to malate, another four-carbon acid, in one form of the C4 pathway. Malate then is transported to bundle-sheath cells, which are located near the vascular system of the leaf. There, malate enters the chloroplasts and is oxidized and decarboxylated (i.e., loses CO2) by malic enzyme. This yields high concentrations of carbon dioxide, which is fed into the Calvin-Benson cycle of the bundle sheath cells, and pyruvate, a three-carbon acid that is translocated back to the mesophyll cells. In the mesophyll chloroplasts, the enzyme pyruvate orthophosphate dikinase (PPDK) uses ATP and Pi to convert pyruvate back to PEP, completing the C4 cycle. There are several variations of this pathway in different species. For example, the amino acids aspartate and alanine can substitute for malate and pyruvate in some species.

The C4 pathway acts as a mechanism to build up high concentrations of carbon dioxide in the chloroplasts of the bundle sheath cells. The resulting higher level of internal carbon dioxide in these chloroplasts serves to increase the ratio of carboxylation to oxygenation, thus minimizing photorespiration. Although the plant must expend extra energy to drive this mechanism, the energy loss is more than compensated by the near elimination of photorespiration under conditions where it would otherwise occur. Sugarcane and certain other plants that employ this pathway have the highest annual yields of biomass of all species. In cool climates, where photorespiration is insignificant, C4 plants are rare. Carbon dioxide is also used efficiently in carbohydrate synthesis in the bundle sheath.

PEP carboxylase, which is located in the mesophyll cells, is an essential enzyme in C4 plants. In hot and dry environments, carbon dioxide concentrations inside the leaf fall when the plant closes or partially closes its stomata to reduce water loss from the leaves. Under these conditions, photorespiration is likely to occur in plants that use Rubisco as the primary carboxylating enzyme, since Rubisco adds oxygen to RuBP when carbon dioxide concentrations are low. PEP carboxylase, however, does not use oxygen as a substrate, and it has a greater affinity for carbon dioxide than Rubisco does. Thus, it has the ability to fix carbon dioxide in reduced carbon dioxide conditions, such as when the stomata on the leaves are only partially open. As a consequence, at similar rates of photosynthesis, C4 plants lose less water when compared with C3 plants. This explains why C4 plants are favoured in dry and warm environments.

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Answered by Anonymous
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