 
	Nature's smallest factory: The Calvin cycle - Cathy Symington
 You're facing a giant bowl
  of energy packed Carbon Crunchies.
  One spoonful. Two. Three.
  Soon, you're powered up by the energy surge
  that comes from your meal.
  But how did that energy get into your bowl?
  Energy exists in the form of sugars
  made by the plant your cereal came from,
  like wheat or corn.
  As you can see, carbon is the chemical backbone,
  and plants get their fix of it
  in the form of carbon dioxide, CO2,
  from the air that we all breath.
  But how does a plant's energy factory,
  housed in the stroma of the chloroplast,
  turn a one carbon gas, like CO2,
  into a six carbon solid, like glucose?
  If you're thinking photosynthesis, you're right.
  But photosynthesis is divided into two steps.
  The first, which stores energy from the sun
  in the form of adenosine triphosphate, or ATP.
  And the second, the Calvin cycle, that captures carbon
  and turns it into sugar.
  This second phase represents one of nature's
  most sustainable production lines.
  And so with that, welcome to world's most miniscule factory.
  The starting materials?
  A mix of CO2 molecules from the air,
  and preassembled molecules called
  ribulose biphosphate, or RuBP,
  each containing five carbons.
  The initiator? An industrious enzyme named rubisco
  that welds one carbon atom from a CO2 molecule
  with the RuBP chain
  to build an initial six carbon sequence.
  That rapidly splits into two shorter chains
  containing three carbons each
  and called phosphoglycerates, or PGAs, for short.
  Enter ATP, and another chemical called
  nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate,
  or just NADPH.
  ATP, working like a lubricant, delivers energy,
  while NADPH affixes one hydrogen to each of the PGA chains,
  changing them into molecules called
  glyceraldehyde 3 phosphates, or G3Ps.
  Glucose needs six carbons to form,
  made from two molecules of G3P,
  which incidentally have six carbons between them.
  So, sugar has just been manufactured, right?
  Not quite.
  The Calvin cycle works like a sustainable production line,
  meaning that those original RuBPs
  that kicked things off at the start,
  need to be recreated by reusing materials
  within the cycle now.
  But each RuBP needs five carbons
  and manufacturing glucose takes a whole six.
  Something doesn't add up.
  The answer lies in one phenomenal fact.
  While we've been focusing on this single production line,
  five others have been happening at the same time.
  With six conveyor belts moving in unison,
  there isn't just one carbon that gets soldered
  to one RuBP chain,
  but six carbons soldered to six RuBPs.
  That creates 12 G3P chains instead of just two,
  meaning that all together, 36 carbons exist:
  the precise number needed to manufacture sugar,
  and rebuild those RuBPs.
  Of the 12 G3Ps pooled together,
  two are siphoned off to form
  that energy rich six carbon glucose chain.
  The one fueling you via your breakfast. Success!
  But back on the manufacturing line,
  the byproducts of this sugar production
  are swiftly assembled to recreate those six RuBPs.
  That requires 30 carbons,
  the exact number contained by the remaining 10 G3PS.
  Now a molecular mix and match occurs.
  Two of the G3Ps are welded together
  forming a six carbon sequence.
  By adding a third G3P, a nine carbon chain is built.
  The first RuBP, made up of five carbons,
  is cast from this,
  leaving four carbons behind.
  But there's no wastage here.
  Those are soldered to a fourth G3P molecule,
  making a seven carbon chain.
  Added to a fifth G3P molecule,
  a ten carbon chain is created,
  enough now to craft two more RuBPs.
  With three full RuBPs recreated
  from five of the ten G3Ps,
  simply duplicating this process
  will renew the six RuBP chains
  needed to restart the cycle again.
  So the Calvin cycle generates the precise number
  of elements and processes
  required to keep this biochemical production line
  turning endlessly.
  And it's just one of the 100s of cycles
  present in nature.
  Why so many?
  Because if biological production processes were linear,
  they wouldn't be nearly as efficient or successful
  at using energy to manufacture the materials
  that nature relies upon, like sugar.
  Cycles create vital feedback loops
  that repeatedly reuse and rebuild ingredients
  crafting as much as possible
  out of the planet's available resources.
  Such as that sugar,
  built using raw sunlight and carbon
  converted in plant factories
  to become the energy that powers you
  and keeps the cycles revolving in your own life.