The simple story of photosynthesis and food Amanda Ooten

Transcriber: Andrea McDonough
Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar

Ever wonder where most of the food

you eat every day comes from?

Well, about 60% of the food you eat

is carbohydrates.

As you can probably tell from its name,

carbohydrates contain carbon,

hydrogen,

and oxygen.

But where do these atoms originally come from

and how do they join together

to make delicious foods like fruits and pasta?

It actually all starts with the air

you are exhaling this very minute,

specifically the carbon dioxide molecules.

Plants are going to breath in

this very same carbon dioxide

through pores in their skin, called stomata.

Plants drink in water from their roots

to get the needed oxygen and hydrogen atoms,

and their electrons,

in order to build carbohydrates.

What is that thing?

Well, that’s a special plant organelle

inside the leaves of plants

called a chloroplast.

It’s green beceause of a special light-absorbing pigment

called chlorophyll.

Each leaf has about 44,000 cells

and every cell can have anywhere

between 20 to 100 chloroplasts.

That’s up to 4,400,000 chloroplasts!

By now, you’ve probably guessed

that we’re talking about the process of photosynthesis

and you might be wondering

when the sun is going to make its entrance.

Let’s go back to that original molecule of water.

The plant has to split this molecule of water

so it can get electrons from it.

But, the plant can’t pull that water apart by itself.

It needs help from the high-energy rays of the sun.

So now that the chloroplast has all the building blocks

  • carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and electrons -

it can use them to go through

the rest of the steps of photosynthesis

to transform that original carbon dioxide gas

into a simple carbohydrate called glucose,

C-6-H-12-O-6.

That little glucose molecule then helps to build

bigger and better carbohydrates

like cellulose.

Cellulose is a type of carbohydrate found in plants

that our body cannot break down.

We call it fiber

and we eat it in vegetables like lettuce,

broccoli,

and celery.

Plants use cellulose to keep themselves strong.

The plant could also turn that glucose into starch,

a large molecule that stores energy for the plant.

We love eating starch from plants like potatoes,

corn,

and rice.

So you see, when you eat plants,

we’re actually benefiting from photosynthesis.

The plant makes things like starch,

which we eat

and then break back down into glucose,

the first form the plant made.

Then, the mitochondria in our cells,

powered by the oxygen we breath,

can turn glucose into pure energy molecules

called ATP.

ATP powers all work done

by each and every one of your cells,

things like communication,

movement,

and transport.

But why do we have to turn that glucose into ATP?

Well, think of it like this.

You’re excited to start your summer job

at the local ice cream stand,

but your boss has just told you

that she is going to pay you in ice cream cones.

What are you going to be able to do

with those ice cream cones?

Nothing,

which is why you kindly asked to be paid in dollars.

ATP is just like dollars.

It is the currency that all cells of life use

while glucose is,

well, kind of like ice cream.

Even plants have mitochondria in their cells

to break down the glucose they make into ATP.

So as you can see,

humans and plants are intricately connected.

The air we breath out

is used by plants to make the carbohydrates

we enjoy so much.

And, in the process,

they are releasing the very same oxygen molecules

we need to breath in

in order that our mitochondria can break down

our delicous carbohydrate meal.

抄写员:Andrea McDonough
审稿人:Bedirhan Cinar 有

没有想过

你每天吃的大部分食物都来自哪里?

嗯,你吃的食物中约有 60%

是碳水化合物。

正如你可能从它的名字中看出的那样,

碳水化合物含有碳、

氢和氧。

但是这些原子最初是从哪里来的

,它们是如何结合在一起

来制作水果和意大利面等美味食物的呢?

实际上,这一切都始于

您此刻呼出的空气,

特别是二氧化碳分子。

植物将

通过皮肤上的毛孔(称为气孔)吸入同样的二氧化碳。

植物从根部喝水,

以获取所需的氧原子和氢原子

以及它们的电子,

以构建碳水化合物。

那个东西是什么?

嗯,那是植物叶子内的一种特殊的植物细胞器

叫做叶绿体。

它是绿色的,因为有一种叫做叶绿素的特殊吸光色素

每片叶子有大约 44,000 个细胞

,每个细胞可以

有 20 到 100 个叶绿体。

那是多达 4,400,000 个叶绿体!

到目前为止,您可能已经

猜到我们正在谈论光合作用的过程,

并且您可能想

知道太阳何时会进入。

让我们回到最初的水分子。

植物必须分裂这个水分子,

以便从中获取电子。

但是,植物不能自己把水分开。

它需要来自太阳的高能射线的帮助。

所以现在叶绿体拥有所有的组成部分

——碳、氢、氧和电子——

它可以利用它们完成

光合作用的其余步骤,

将原始的二氧化碳气体

转化为一种简单的碳水化合物,称为葡萄糖,

C- 6-H-12-O-6。

然后那个小葡萄糖分子有助于构建

更大更好的碳水化合物,

如纤维素。

纤维素是一种存在于植物中的碳水化合物

,我们的身体无法分解。

我们称之为纤维

,我们在生菜、

西兰花

和芹菜等蔬菜中食用。

植物使用纤维素来保持自己的强壮。

该植物还可以将葡萄糖转化为淀粉,这

是一种为植物储存能量的大分子。

我们喜欢吃土豆、玉米和大米等植物中的淀粉

所以你看,当你吃植物时,

我们实际上从光合作用中受益。

这种植物制造淀粉之类的东西

,我们吃这些

东西然后分解成葡萄糖,

这是植物制造的第一种形式。

然后,我们细胞中的线粒体在

我们呼吸的氧气的驱动下,

可以将葡萄糖转化为

称为 ATP 的纯能量分子。

ATP

为您的每一个细胞完成的所有工作提供动力

,例如沟通、

运动

和运输。

但为什么我们必须将葡萄糖转化为 ATP?

嗯,这样想吧。

你很高兴能

在当地的冰淇淋摊开始你的暑期工作,

但你的老板刚刚告诉你

,她将以冰淇淋蛋卷支付给你。

能用那些冰淇淋蛋卷做什么?

没什么,

这就是为什么你好心地要求以美元支付的原因。

ATP 就像美元。

它是所有生命细胞都使用的货币

,而葡萄糖

就像冰淇淋一样。

甚至植物的细胞中也有线粒体,可以将

它们产生的葡萄糖分解成 ATP。

如您所见,

人类和植物之间有着错综复杂的联系。

我们呼出的空气

被植物用来制造

我们非常喜欢的碳水化合物。

而且,在这个过程中,

它们释放出与我们呼吸所需的氧气分子完全相同的氧气分子

,以便我们的线粒体能够分解

我们美味的碳水化合物餐。