201. The direct carbohydrate precursor that can leave the Calvin cycle as a net product is:
ⓐ. ribulose bisphosphate
ⓑ. triose phosphate
ⓒ. carbon dioxide
ⓓ. oxygen
Correct Answer: triose phosphate
Explanation: The Calvin cycle does not usually release glucose directly as its immediate net product. Instead, the direct carbohydrate precursor that emerges from the cycle is triose phosphate. This three-carbon compound can later be used to synthesize larger carbohydrates such as glucose, sucrose, and starch. Its formation marks the successful reduction of fixed carbon into a more energy-rich organic form. Only a portion of the triose phosphate produced becomes net output, while the rest is used to regenerate RuBP. This makes triose phosphate the central immediate product available for biosynthesis. Therefore, triose phosphate is the correct answer.
202. How many molecules of carbon dioxide must be fixed in the Calvin cycle to obtain one net molecule of triose phosphate?
ⓐ. Three
ⓑ. One
ⓒ. Two
ⓓ. Six
Correct Answer: Three
Explanation: Three molecules of carbon dioxide must enter the Calvin cycle to produce one net molecule of triose phosphate. This happens because the cycle generates several three-carbon intermediates, but most of them are used to regenerate the carbon acceptor RuBP. Only one triose phosphate remains available as net gain after the necessary regeneration steps are completed. This numerical relationship is a basic stoichiometric feature of the Calvin cycle. It helps explain why the cycle must turn multiple times before a significant carbohydrate output is obtained. Understanding this also clarifies how carbon accounting works in photosynthesis. Thus, three carbon dioxide molecules are required for one net triose phosphate.
203. For the synthesis of one molecule of glucose through the Calvin cycle, the plant must fix:
ⓐ. three molecules of carbon dioxide
ⓑ. four molecules of carbon dioxide
ⓒ. five molecules of carbon dioxide
ⓓ. six molecules of carbon dioxide
Correct Answer: six molecules of carbon dioxide
Explanation: One glucose molecule contains six carbon atoms, so the Calvin cycle must fix six molecules of carbon dioxide to provide the required six carbon atoms. Since three carbon dioxide molecules yield one net triose phosphate, two such triose phosphate molecules are needed to form one glucose molecule. This is why six carbon dioxide molecules are required in total. The calculation reflects the carbon balance of the pathway rather than a simple one-step conversion. It is one of the most important numerical facts associated with Calvin-cycle output. This relationship also shows how repeated turns of the cycle build larger carbohydrates. Therefore, six molecules of carbon dioxide are needed.
204. Why is the Calvin cycle called a cycle rather than a straight pathway?
ⓐ. Because it ends with oxygen evolution from water splitting
ⓑ. Because it regenerates the initial carbon dioxide acceptor at the end of the sequence
ⓒ. Because it occurs only in circular chloroplasts
ⓓ. Because it produces only cyclic sugars in the stroma
Correct Answer: Because it regenerates the initial carbon dioxide acceptor at the end of the sequence
Explanation: The Calvin cycle is called a cycle because the starting carbon acceptor, ribulose bisphosphate, is regenerated at the end of the reaction sequence. This regeneration allows the same molecule to participate again in another round of carbon fixation. A straight pathway would end with a final product and not restore its starting substrate in this way. The cyclic nature is therefore a structural and functional property of the pathway. It ensures continuity of carbon fixation as long as the required inputs remain available. This is one of the defining features of the Calvin cycle. Hence, it is called a cycle because the initial acceptor is regenerated.
205. A student inhibits RuBisCO activity in a chloroplast but keeps ATP and NADPH available. Which Calvin-cycle step would be affected first and most directly?
ⓐ. Regeneration of RuBP
ⓑ. Carboxylation of RuBP
ⓒ. Reduction of triose phosphate
ⓓ. Conversion of starch into sucrose
Correct Answer: Carboxylation of RuBP
Explanation: RuBisCO catalyzes the first carbon-fixation step of the Calvin cycle, where carbon dioxide combines with ribulose bisphosphate. If this enzyme is inhibited, the cycle cannot begin its normal carboxylation phase. Even if ATP and NADPH are present, they cannot compensate for the absence of the initial fixation reaction. This means the earliest and most direct effect will be failure of RuBP carboxylation. Later phases such as reduction and regeneration will also be disturbed, but only as consequences of this first block. The question asks for the first and most direct effect. Therefore, carboxylation of RuBP is the correct answer.
206. Which statement best corrects the misconception that glucose is the immediate product released directly from the Calvin cycle?
ⓐ. Glucose is the first stable product formed immediately after RuBP combines with carbon dioxide
ⓑ. Glucose leaves the Calvin cycle directly, while triose phosphate remains only for regeneration
ⓒ. The immediate net product is triose phosphate, which can later be used to form glucose
ⓓ. The Calvin cycle does not produce any carbohydrate precursor until the next light reaction begins
Correct Answer: The immediate net product is triose phosphate, which can later be used to form glucose
Explanation: The Calvin cycle does not release glucose directly as its immediate net output. Instead, it produces triose phosphate, a three-carbon reduced compound that can later be used to synthesize larger carbohydrates such as glucose, sucrose, and starch. This distinction is important because students often confuse the eventual product derived from the cycle with the immediate product that exits it. The cycle first generates small three-carbon intermediates, not a six-carbon sugar in one direct step. Glucose formation is a later biosynthetic result. Therefore, the correct correction is that triose phosphate is the immediate net product, which can later give rise to glucose.
207. Assertion: The Calvin cycle can continue only if ribulose bisphosphate is regenerated. Reason: RuBP is the carbon dioxide acceptor required for each new round of carbon fixation.
ⓐ. Both Assertion and Reason are true, and Reason is the correct explanation of Assertion
ⓑ. Both Assertion and Reason are true, but Reason is not the correct explanation of Assertion
ⓒ. Assertion is true, but Reason is false
ⓓ. Assertion is false, but Reason is true
Correct Answer: Both Assertion and Reason are true, and Reason is the correct explanation of Assertion
Explanation: The assertion is true because the Calvin cycle depends on repeated rounds of carbon fixation, and that cannot happen unless the original acceptor molecule is restored. The reason is also true because ribulose bisphosphate is the compound that accepts carbon dioxide at the beginning of each cycle turn. If RuBP were not regenerated, the process would stop after one round. This is exactly why regeneration is considered one of the three major phases of the cycle. The reason does not merely accompany the assertion; it directly explains it. Thus, both statements are true and the reason correctly explains the assertion.
208. Which of the following is the best non-example of an event belonging directly to the Calvin cycle?
ⓐ. Carboxylation of ribulose bisphosphate
ⓑ. Reduction of $3$-phosphoglycerate using ATP and NADPH
ⓒ. Regeneration of the carbon dioxide acceptor
ⓓ. Splitting of water to supply electrons and release oxygen
Correct Answer: Splitting of water to supply electrons and release oxygen
Explanation: The Calvin cycle is the carbon-fixation phase of photosynthesis and includes carboxylation, reduction, and regeneration reactions in the stroma. Splitting of water, however, belongs to the light reaction and occurs in association with the thylakoid membrane. That process supplies electrons, protons, and oxygen, but it is not one of the direct steps of the Calvin cycle itself. The question asks for a non-example, so the correct answer must belong to another phase of photosynthesis. Carboxylation, reduction, and regeneration are genuine Calvin-cycle events. Therefore, water splitting and oxygen release are the best non-example.
209. For every three molecules of carbon dioxide fixed in the Calvin cycle, how many molecules of ATP and NADPH are required to yield one net triose phosphate?
ⓐ. 6 ATP and 6 NADPH
ⓑ. 9 ATP and 3 NADPH
ⓒ. 9 ATP and 6 NADPH
ⓓ. 12 ATP and 6 NADPH
Correct Answer: 9 ATP and 6 NADPH
Explanation: The Calvin cycle uses both ATP and NADPH during the reduction and regeneration phases. For the fixation of three molecules of carbon dioxide, the cycle yields one net molecule of triose phosphate, but this requires a specific energy and reducing-power input. The standard requirement is 9 ATP molecules and 6 NADPH molecules. This reflects the energy cost of converting inorganic carbon into a reduced organic product while also regenerating RuBP for continued cycling. The numerical relation is an important stoichiometric feature of the pathway. Therefore, 9 ATP and 6 NADPH is the correct requirement for one net triose phosphate.
210. A plant cell fixes six molecules of carbon dioxide through the Calvin cycle. Which total input of ATP and NADPH is required for the net production of one glucose molecule?
ⓐ. 12 ATP and 12 NADPH
ⓑ. 18 ATP and 12 NADPH
ⓒ. 18 ATP and 18 NADPH
ⓓ. 24 ATP and 12 NADPH
Correct Answer: 18 ATP and 12 NADPH
Explanation: Six molecules of carbon dioxide are needed to provide the six carbon atoms required for one glucose molecule. Since three carbon dioxide molecules produce one net triose phosphate using 9 ATP and 6 NADPH, doubling that requirement gives the cost for forming two triose phosphates, which together can form one glucose. Therefore, the total requirement becomes 18 ATP and 12 NADPH. This calculation is based on the standard stoichiometry of the Calvin cycle. It shows that glucose synthesis through carbon fixation is energy intensive. Hence, 18 ATP and 12 NADPH is the correct total input.
211. Which statement best compares the carboxylation phase with the regeneration phase of the Calvin cycle?
ⓐ. Carboxylation forms the initial fixed-carbon product, whereas regeneration reforms the carbon dioxide acceptor
ⓑ. Carboxylation releases oxygen, whereas regeneration absorbs sunlight directly
ⓒ. Carboxylation produces NADPH, whereas regeneration breaks down glucose
ⓓ. Carboxylation occurs in thylakoids, whereas regeneration occurs in root cells
Correct Answer: Carboxylation forms the initial fixed-carbon product, whereas regeneration reforms the carbon dioxide acceptor
Explanation: The carboxylation phase begins the Calvin cycle by incorporating carbon dioxide into an organic intermediate through reaction with RuBP. The regeneration phase, in contrast, restores RuBP so that the cycle can continue into another round. These two phases therefore have different but complementary functions. One introduces new carbon into the pathway, and the other maintains the cyclic nature of the pathway by recreating the acceptor. Neither phase directly absorbs light or releases oxygen. This comparison is important for understanding how the Calvin cycle progresses in an ordered manner. Therefore, the correct comparison is that carboxylation fixes carbon while regeneration reforms the acceptor.
212. After three molecules of carbon dioxide enter the Calvin cycle, several triose phosphate molecules are formed. Why does only one net triose phosphate typically leave the cycle?
ⓐ. Because the remaining triose phosphate molecules are oxidized completely to carbon dioxide
ⓑ. Because most of the triose phosphate is used to regenerate ribulose bisphosphate
ⓒ. Because the remaining triose phosphate is stored permanently in the thylakoid lumen
ⓓ. Because only one triose phosphate can be reduced in each cycle
Correct Answer: Because most of the triose phosphate is used to regenerate ribulose bisphosphate
Explanation: The Calvin cycle is not designed simply to produce product and stop; it must also regenerate its starting acceptor, RuBP, to continue functioning. For this reason, after three molecules of carbon dioxide are fixed, the cycle produces multiple three-carbon intermediates, but most of them are redirected into the regeneration pathway. Only one net triose phosphate remains available to leave the cycle as useful output. This is why the net gain is smaller than the total number of intermediates formed. The pattern reflects the cyclic organization of the pathway rather than inefficiency. Therefore, most triose phosphate is used for regeneration of ribulose bisphosphate.
213. The major biosynthetic significance of the Calvin cycle is that it provides reduced carbon that can be used for the synthesis of:
ⓐ. only oxygen and water
ⓑ. sugars and many other organic compounds
ⓒ. only chlorophyll and ATP
ⓓ. minerals and amino ions
Correct Answer: sugars and many other organic compounds
Explanation: The Calvin cycle converts inorganic carbon dioxide into reduced organic carbon in the form of carbohydrate precursors. These reduced carbon compounds do not remain limited to one end product only. They can be used to form sugars and also serve as starting material for the synthesis of several other biomolecules in the plant. This makes the Calvin cycle a central biosynthetic pathway rather than only a sugar-producing sequence. Its products feed broader metabolic processes of growth and storage. In this way, carbon fixed in photosynthesis becomes available to the whole plant body. Therefore, the Calvin cycle is biosynthetically significant because it supports sugars and many other organic compounds.
214. In photosynthetic cells, the carbohydrate mainly synthesized in the cytosol from Calvin-cycle output is:
ⓐ. glycogen
ⓑ. cellulose
ⓒ. lactose
ⓓ. sucrose
Correct Answer: sucrose
Explanation: The Calvin cycle produces reduced carbon intermediates that can leave the chloroplast and enter cytosolic metabolism. In the cytosol, these exported products are mainly used for the synthesis of sucrose. Sucrose is the principal transport sugar in most higher plants and can be moved from source tissues to sink tissues through the phloem. This makes it especially important as a mobile carbohydrate product of photosynthesis. The chloroplast and cytosol therefore differ in the way they use Calvin-cycle output. Because sucrose is the chief cytosolic carbohydrate formed from that output, it is the correct answer.
215. When Calvin-cycle products are retained within the chloroplast, they are mainly converted into:
ⓐ. starch
ⓑ. glycogen
ⓒ. maltose
ⓓ. cellulose
Correct Answer: starch
Explanation: Not all of the reduced carbon produced by the Calvin cycle leaves the chloroplast immediately. A portion is retained inside the chloroplast and used for starch synthesis. Starch serves as a storage carbohydrate in plants and is an important reserve form of photosynthetically fixed carbon. This distinguishes it from sucrose, which is more closely associated with transport. The partitioning of Calvin-cycle output into transport and storage forms is a major biosynthetic feature of photosynthesis. Therefore, when the products are retained inside the chloroplast, they are mainly converted into starch.
216. Which statement correctly relates sucrose and starch to the biosynthetic outputs of the Calvin cycle?
ⓐ. Sucrose is the main storage carbohydrate in chloroplasts, while starch is the transport sugar in phloem
ⓑ. Both sucrose and starch are formed only inside thylakoid membranes
ⓒ. Sucrose mainly serves transport, whereas starch mainly serves storage
ⓓ. Both sucrose and starch are direct first stable products of carbon fixation
Correct Answer: Sucrose mainly serves transport, whereas starch mainly serves storage
Explanation: The Calvin cycle provides reduced carbon that can be directed into different biosynthetic fates. When this carbon is used in the cytosol, it commonly contributes to sucrose formation, which functions mainly in transport. When it remains in the chloroplast, it commonly contributes to starch synthesis, which functions mainly in storage. This difference reflects the distinct physiological roles of the two carbohydrates in plant life. One is a mobile sugar and the other is a reserve polysaccharide. Thus, the correct relation is that sucrose mainly serves transport and starch mainly serves storage.
217. The net output of the Calvin cycle provides carbon skeletons that can contribute to the synthesis of:
ⓐ. only mineral salts
ⓑ. lipids and amino acids
ⓒ. only oxygen molecules
ⓓ. only chlorophyll proteins
Correct Answer: lipids and amino acids
Explanation: The Calvin cycle does more than support carbohydrate formation alone. Its reduced carbon products can enter other metabolic pathways and provide carbon skeletons for the synthesis of lipids, amino acids, and other organic compounds. This is why the Calvin cycle is considered a central anabolic pathway in plant metabolism. It supplies basic organic material from which many classes of biomolecules can be built. The importance of the pathway therefore extends beyond simple sugar production. Hence, lipids and amino acids are correctly identified as possible biosynthetic outcomes of Calvin-cycle carbon.
218. RuBisCO is best known as an enzyme that can act as both a:
ⓐ. hydrolase and transferase
ⓑ. kinase and phosphatase
ⓒ. dehydrogenase and synthetase
ⓓ. carboxylase and oxygenase
Correct Answer: carboxylase and oxygenase
Explanation: RuBisCO has a dual functional nature that is central to plant carbon metabolism. It can act as a carboxylase when it adds carbon dioxide to ribulose bisphosphate during the Calvin cycle. It can also act as an oxygenase when oxygen competes for the same enzyme system. This dual behavior is important because it influences whether carbon fixation proceeds efficiently or whether a less efficient route becomes favored. The enzyme’s two activities therefore have major physiological consequences. For this reason, RuBisCO is correctly described as both a carboxylase and an oxygenase.
219. Which condition most strongly favors the carboxylase activity of RuBisCO?
ⓐ. High carbon dioxide concentration relative to oxygen
ⓑ. Very low carbon dioxide concentration with abundant oxygen
ⓒ. Complete absence of stromal enzymes
ⓓ. Total darkness with no ATP formation
Correct Answer: High carbon dioxide concentration relative to oxygen
Explanation: RuBisCO activity depends strongly on the relative availability of carbon dioxide and oxygen. When carbon dioxide concentration is high compared with oxygen, the enzyme is more likely to function as a carboxylase. This favors carbon fixation and supports normal operation of the Calvin cycle. In contrast, when oxygen becomes relatively more influential, RuBisCO may shift toward oxygenase activity. Therefore, the balance between the two gases is a major determinant of enzyme function. A high carbon dioxide to oxygen ratio most strongly supports the carboxylase role of RuBisCO.
220. Which condition tends to increase the oxygenase activity of RuBisCO?
ⓐ. High carbon dioxide concentration and low oxygen availability
ⓑ. Low temperature with strong carbon dioxide enrichment
ⓒ. High oxygen concentration relative to carbon dioxide
ⓓ. Continuous starch accumulation inside the chloroplast
Correct Answer: High oxygen concentration relative to carbon dioxide
Explanation: Because RuBisCO can interact with either carbon dioxide or oxygen, the relative concentration of these gases strongly affects its behavior. When oxygen concentration becomes high relative to carbon dioxide, the oxygenase activity of the enzyme is favored. This reduces the efficiency of normal carbon fixation and shifts the balance away from productive Calvin-cycle carboxylation. The outcome therefore depends not simply on the presence of oxygen, but on its relation to carbon dioxide availability. This competitive situation is one of the key factors affecting RuBisCO activity. Hence, high oxygen relative to carbon dioxide tends to increase the oxygenase function.