Macromolecules
Cards, Lipids, Proteins & Nucleic Acids
Structure & Function Model
Enzymes & Reactions
Environmental Effects on Enzymes
100

These are the four major macromolecules found in living organisms.

What are carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids?

100

This macromolecule provides long‑term energy storage and insulation.

What are lipids?

100

This is the monomer of proteins.

What is an amino acid?

100

Enzymes speed up chemical reactions by lowering this.

What is activation energy?

100

Increasing temperature generally does this to enzyme activity—up to a point.

What is increases it?

200

This term refers to the small building blocks that join to form macromolecules.

What are monomers?

200

Glucose, starch, and cellulose all belong to this macromolecule group.

What are carbohydrates?

200

This is the monomer of nucleic acids.

What is a nucleotide?

200

This term describes the molecule that an enzyme acts on.

What is a substrate?

200

Extremely high temperatures cause enzymes to lose their shape, a process called ____.

What is denaturation?

300

This macromolecule is the primary source of quick energy for cells.

What are carbohydrates?

300

Enzymes belong to this macromolecule group.

What are proteins?

300

This macromolecule has a ring‑like structure and is often drawn as a hexagon.

What are carbohydrates?

300

This model describes how enzymes and substrates fit together like a key and a lock.

What is the lock‑and‑key model?

300

Each enzyme works best at a certain pH. This is called its ____.

What is optimal pH?

400

This macromolecule stores genetic information.

What are nucleic acids (DNA/RNA)?

400

DNA and RNA differ because RNA contains this sugar instead of deoxyribose.

What is ribose?

400

This macromolecule is often drawn as long hydrocarbon chains.

What are lipids?

400

When an enzyme loses its shape due to heat or pH, this has happened.

What is denaturation?

400

Increasing substrate concentration increases reaction rate until enzymes reach this point.

What is saturation?

500

This macromolecule is made of long chains of amino acids.

What are proteins?

500

This macromolecule forms cell membranes due to its hydrophobic and hydrophilic regions.

What are phospholipids?

500

Explain how structure determines function using proteins as an example.

The shape of a protein determines how it interacts with other molecules. If the shape changes, the protein may no longer function.

500

Explain why enzymes are considered “specific.”

Each enzyme only works with one substrate because their shapes must match.

500

Describe how you would design an investigation to test how pH affects enzyme activity.

Prepare identical enzyme solutions, expose each to different pH levels, measure the reaction rate (e.g., product formation), plot the results, and compare activity across pH conditions.


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