23.
Energy Transformations: Respiration and Photosynthesis
The Dark Reactions: Carbohydrate Synthesis
The relative numbers of the molecules involved are
indicated on the flow diagram on the previous page. To make one
glucose molecule, six C02 are combined with six RuDP
to produce twelve molecules of 3PG. These in principle could be
used to make six glucose molecules, but then the process would not
be cyclic, and would grind to a halt as soon as all the RuDP was
used up. Instead, only two of the molecules of 3PG are destined
to end as glucose, while the other ten, which contain a total of
thirty carbon atoms, continue around the Calvin cycle and eventually
are converted into six molecules of five-carbon RuDP, ready for
reuse.
The Calvin cycle as an adaptation of gluconeogenesis
is a beautiful example of the subtlety that trial-and-error and
three billion years of evolution are capable of. The breakdown of
glucose to C02 requires all of the complex chemistry
of the citric acid cycle. The synthesis of glucose from C02
avoids the necessity of running a citric acid cycle in reverse by
the trick of using RuDP as a working molecule, and turning a linear
gluconeogenesis pathway into a cycle. If our current ideas about
the order in which various steps in metabolism evolved on Earth
are correct, then at the time that gluconeogenesis was adapted for
the purposes of the dark reactions of photosynthesis, life was still
anaerobic and the citric acid cycle did not yet exist.