A macromolecule that contains elements such as: Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen.
What is Carbohydrates
The structure of H2O.
What is a bent shape?
A singular molecule that makes up a bigger molecule.
What is a monomer?
Has the atomic #1, Atomic mass 2, and symbol H.
What is hydrogen?
The amino acid sequence of polypeptides or protein.
What is primary?
A macromolecule that has a function such as: Cell transportation, muscle, contraction, and a little bit of everything.
What is Proteins?
An unequal distribution of its electron density.
What is a polar solvent?
The act, state, or process of sticking together caused by intermolecular forces.
What is cohesion?
The most abundant gas in the atmosphere.
What is Nitrogen?
The 3D shape of a polypeptide.
What is tertiary structure?
The types of macromolecules.
What is proteins, lipids, fats, carbohydrates, and nucleic acids?
Water turns into gas when experiencing high temperatures.
What is vaporization?
A type of primary bond formed when electrons are transferred from one atom to another.
What is ionic bonds?
What is Carbon?
This structure results from coiling of an amino acid chain into helixes or folding.
What is secondary?
A macromolecule that has a function of storing and transmitting instructions to make proteins.
What is Nucleic Acids?
A chemical substance that can dissolve in water at a specific temperature.
What is solubility?
The secondary protein structure where the polypeptide chain folds back and forth.
What is beta-sheet?
What is phosphorus?
The combination of 2 or more polypeptide tertiary structure.
What is quaternary?
A macromolecule which types include: triglycerides, phospholipids, & steroids.
What is lipids?
What is no? (If you said yes then you're wrong!!)
The secondary protein structure where the amino acid chain coils.
What is Alpha helix?
The 6 elements of life.
What is Carbon, Hydrogen, Nitrogen, Oxygen, Phosphorus, and Sulfur? (CHNOPS)
The structure types.
What is primary, secondary, tertiary, and quaternary?