In C4 and C3 plants, CO2 enters through the stomata and is diffused into the mesophyll. The CO2 is stored in the stroma of the mesophyll for use in the Calvin cycle. The ATP and NADPH are used for energy in the reactions. The ATP is an energy source and consumes NADPH as areducing power for high-energy electrons to make sugar. While C3 plants use the palisade layer and the spongy mesophyll, C4 plants use bundle sheaths for the reaction centers. The chloroplasts for C4 cells are found within the bundle sheath cells. C4 plants combine CO2 with RuBP while C3 plants combine CO2 with PEP and use the CAM pathway for transportation. In the Calvin cycle, Carbon dioxide enters the cell, and attaches to a five-carbon sugar. The RUBP caboxylase catalyzes the compound. The product of the reaction is a six-carbon intermediate. Then, a pair of electrons donated from NADPH reduces 3-bisphosphoglcerate to G3P which stoares for potential energy. Then the cycle uses 3 more molecules ATP and RuBP is prepared to receive CO2. The sugar produced is
In C4 and C3 plants, CO2 enters through the stomata and is diffused into the mesophyll. The CO2 is stored in the stroma of the mesophyll for use in the Calvin cycle. The ATP and NADPH are used for energy in the reactions. The ATP is an energy source and consumes NADPH as areducing power for high-energy electrons to make sugar. While C3 plants use the palisade layer and the spongy mesophyll, C4 plants use bundle sheaths for the reaction centers. The chloroplasts for C4 cells are found within the bundle sheath cells. C4 plants combine CO2 with RuBP while C3 plants combine CO2 with PEP and use the CAM pathway for transportation. In the Calvin cycle, Carbon dioxide enters the cell, and attaches to a five-carbon sugar. The RUBP caboxylase catalyzes the compound. The product of the reaction is a six-carbon intermediate. Then, a pair of electrons donated from NADPH reduces 3-bisphosphoglcerate to G3P which stoares for potential energy. Then the cycle uses 3 more molecules ATP and RuBP is prepared to receive CO2. The sugar produced is