Biology (2.3) Questions
fatty acid
hydrocarbon chain often bonded to glycerol in a lipid.
lipid
non polar molecule composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen; includes fats and oils
polymer
large, carbon-based molecule formed by monomers
carbohydrate
molecule composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen; includes sugars and starches
amino acid
molecule that makes up proteins; composed of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, and sometimes sulfur
protein
polymer composed of amino acids linked by peptide bonds; folds into a particular structure depending on bonds between amino acids
nucleic acid
polymer of nucleotides; the genetic material of organisms
Write your own analogy for the formation of a polymer from monomers.
string of holiday lights, beads on a necklace or bracelet, links in a chain...
What is the relationship between a polymer and monomer?
A polymer is a large molecule made up of smaller units called monomers, which are linked together.
How are both nucleic acids and proteins polymers?
Both are made of smaller units that are bonded together. Proteins are polymers of amino acids; nucleic acids are polymers of nucleotides.
What is the relationship between proteins and nucleic acids?
Proteins are polymers of amino acids that are assembled based on genetic information in nucleic acids.
monomer
a molecular subunit of a polymer
How are carbohydrates and lipids similar? How are they different?
Both: - made of carbon, hydrogen, & oxygen - broken down as a source of energy - have some structural functions Carbohydrates include starches & sugars Lipids include fats and oil