Calvin cycle


The Calvin cycle (or Calvin-Benson cycle or carbon fixation) is a series of biochemical reactions that takes place in the stroma of chloroplasts in photosynthetic organisms. It was discovered by Melvin Calvin and Andrew Benson at the University of California, Berkeley with James Bassham also contributing.[1] It is one of the light-independent reactions or dark reactions.

Steps of the Calvin cycle

(Simplified versions of the Calvin cycle integrate the remaining steps, except for the last one, into one general step - the regeneration of RuBP - also, one G3P would exit here.)

All the G3P produced earlier is converted into RuBP (5C), so 10 G3Ps (30C, 10 phosphates) were needed to produce 6 RuBPs (30C, 6 phosphates). 6 ATPs were also needed in the last step, giving a total of 18 ATPs used up per 6 CO<sub>2</sub>s. However, four phosphate ions are lost and these also form ATP. The energy in those ATPs is used to drive some of the reactions.

At high temperatures, RuBisCO will react with O<sub>2</sub> instead of CO<sub>2</sub> in photorespiration. This turns RuBP into 3PGA and 2-phosphoglycolate, a 2-carbon molecule which can be converted into 3PGA, some of which will exit the Calvin cycle. However, if this continues the RuBP will eventually be depleted, which slows down the cycle if electrons are entering from the light-dependent reaction too quickly.

Products of the Calvin cycle

The immediate product of the Calvin cycle is glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate (G3P). Two G3P molecules (or one F6P molecule) that have exited the cycle are used to make larger carbohydrates. In simplified versions of the Calvin cycle they may be converted to F6P or F5P after exit, but this conversion is also part of the cycle.

See also

References

Citations