Light-dependent Reactions
Light-independent Reactions
Glycolysis
Citric Acid Cycle
Oxidative Phosphorylation
100

In which organelle does photosynthesis occur?

Chloroplast

100

Where in the chloroplast does the Calvin Cycle occur?

Stroma

100

Which organisms perform photosynthesis? Which organisms perform cellular respiration?

PS -- producers/autotrophs

CR -- nearly all organisms, (producers, consumers, most decomposers, etc)

100

Where does the CAC occur?

Matrix (innermost space in the mitochondria)

100

Where does oxidative phosphorylation occur?

Inner mitochondrial membrane

200

Where in the chloroplast do the light-dependent reactions occur?

Thylakoid membrane

200

What powers the Calvin Cycle and where do these molecules come from?

NADPH (electrons) and ATP from the light-dependent reactions

200

Where does glycolysis occur?

Cytoplasm (fluid that fills the cell and surrounds the organelles)

200

What is the major input of the CAC?

Pyruvates (from glycolysis)

200

What are the inputs for oxidative phosphorylation and where do these inputs come from?

NADH and FADH2 (electron carriers) from the CAC and NADH from glycolysis

300

What is the purpose of H2O?

It is split to provide electrons to the electron transport chain

300

In addition to NADPH and ATP, what is the main input for the Calvin Cycle?

CO2

300

What is the major input of glycolysis?

Glucose

300

What are the four outputs of the CAC?

CO2, 2 ATP, NADH, FADH2

300

As the electrons move through the electron transport chain, what happens to the H+ ions?

The H+ ions are forced across the inner membrane through the protein channels, building up a lot of pressure on one side of the membrane due to the uneven amount of H+.

400

What is the purpose of the sunlight?

It excites the electrons to move through the electron transport chain

400

During the Calvin Cycle, CO2 is "fixed" into which major output?

Glucose (C6H12O6)

400

What happens to glucose during glycolysis?

Glucose is broken down into two pyruvates (glyco = glucose; lysis = "to break down")

400

We all have heard that animals breathe out CO2. But WHY do organisms release CO2?

It is a byproduct of the CAC

400

What happens next to the Hions? What else is produced from this?

The H+ ions flow back across the membrane through ATP synthase to even out the number of H+ on each side. As this happens, ATP synthase will produce lots of ATP.

500

What are the three outputs of the light-dependent reactions?

NADPH (carries electrons), ATP, and O2 (byproduct from the splitting of water)

500

What is the purpose of photosynthesis?

To convert sun energy into energy stored in the bonds of glucose (aka, sunlight to glucose)

500

What else is produced from breaking the bonds of glucose?

2 ATP and NADH (electron carrier)

500

Freebie!

:)

500

Explain the role of O2 as an input and H2O as an output of oxidative phosphorylation.

O2 is the final electron acceptor at the end of the electron transport chain. It accepts two electrons, giving it a 2- charge. It then combines with two H+ ions, making H2O as a byproduct!