4.0 Article

The photosynthetic oxygen evolution does not exclude the important role and contribution of bicarbonate photolysis

Journal

ACTA GEOCHIMICA
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER INT PUBL AG
DOI: 10.1007/s11631-023-00649-z

Keywords

Bicarbonate effect; Dole effect; Kok cycle; Heavy oxygen isotope; Artificial photosynthetic reactor

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Photosynthesis is the most important biochemical reaction on Earth, which converts light energy into chemical energy. Recent studies suggest that bicarbonate plays a crucial role in photosynthesis, working together with water in a 1:1 stoichiometric relationship. This finding provides a logical explanation for the coordination between light and dark reactions during photosynthesis.
Photosynthesis is the most important biochemical reaction on Earth. It has co-evolved and developed with the Earth, driving the biogeochemical cycle of all elements on the planet and serving as the only chemical process in nature that can convert light energy into chemical energy. Some heavy oxygen isotopic (18O) labeling experiments have conclusively demonstrated that the oxygen released by photosynthesis comes only from water and are written into textbooks. However, it is not difficult to find that bicarbonate has never been excluded from the direct substrate of photosynthesis from beginning to end during the history of photosynthesis research. No convincing mechanism can be used to explain photosynthetic oxygen evolution solely from water photolysis. The bicarbonate effect, the Dole effect, the thermodynamic convenience of bicarbonate photolysis, the crystal structure characteristics of photosystem II, and the reinterpretation of heavy oxygen isotopic labeling (18O) experiments all indicate that the photosynthetic oxygen evolution does not exclude the important role and contribution of bicarbonate photolysis. The recently proposed view that bicarbonate photolysis is the premise of water photolysis, bicarbonate photolysis and water photolysis work together with a 1:1 (mol/mol) stoichiometric relationship, and the stoichiometric relationship between oxygen and carbon dioxide released during photosynthetic oxygen evolution is also 1:1, has excellent applicability and objectivity, which can logically and reasonably explain the precise coordination between light and dark reactions during photosynthesis, the bicarbonate effect, the Dole effect, the Kok cycle and the neutrality of water and carbon in nature. This is of great significance for constructing the bionic artificial photosynthetic reactors and scientifically answering the question of the source of elemental stoichiometric relationships in nature.

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