Photorespiration

Photorespiration is an alternate pathway for rubisco, the main enzyme of photosynthesis (specifically, the Calvin cycle). Although rubisco favors carbon, it can also use oxygen, producing glycolate. This usually occurs when oxygen levels are high; for example, when the stomata (tiny pores on the underside of the leaf) are closed to prevent water loss. The reaction is:
RuBP + rubisco + O2 → phosphoglycolate
The glycolate is then sent to peroxisomes. Photorespiration is a wasteful process because no PGAL is created. PGAL is used to create nearly all of the food and structures in the plant. Plants cope with photorespiration via CAM and C4 metabolism.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
respiration (physiology)
cat's cradle (string game)
transshipment
florida group
robert balling
kappa alpha theta
john marshall harlan
common bean
british comics
psion 5
bypassing
gagarin (town)
george dalgarno
helvetic republic
c4 carbon fixation
multiple launch rocket system
prentis cobb hale
peace center
juan jos ibarretxe
john taylor (1503 1554)
theodore bikel
danielle harris
the superjesus
loganair
archosaur
ryotaro shiba
presbyopia
jacob's ladder (movie)
ernesto geisel
spiritual plane
jacob's ladder
hans ulrich rudel
estelle axton
olympique de marseille
beaufort sea
artemy petrovich volynsky
list of syrians
mayors of coon rapids, minnesota
boris ivanovich kurakin
red spider mite
john taylor (1752 1833)
mikhail illarionovich vorontsov
anders retzius
chronic functional abdominal pain