Microscopes
Carbohydrates
Lipids
Proteins
Nucleic Acids
100

This type of microscopy uses visible light and glass lenses.

What is light microscopy?

100

This monosaccharide, with formula C6H12O6, is the primary energy source for cells.

What is glucose?

100

Unlike carbohydrates, lipids are not considered this type of macromolecule.

What are polymers?

100

The monomer of proteins is called this.

What is an amino acid?

100

DNA stores genetic information, while this nucleic acid helps access and use it.

What is RNA?

200

The limit of resolution for light microscopy is about this many micrometers.

What is 1 micrometer?

200

Name the disaccharide formed from glucose + fructose.

What is sucrose?

200

Saturated fatty acids form straight chains and are usually in this physical state at room temperature.

What are solid fats?

200

The linear sequence of amino acids is known as this level of protein structure.

What is primary structure?

200

The monomer of nucleic acids is called a ________.

What is a nucleotide?

300

Transmission electron microscopes can magnify up to this level.

What is 100,000x?

300

Plants store glucose in this polysaccharide, found in plastids like chloroplasts.

What is starch?

300

These amphipathic molecules form the bilayer of cell membranes.

What are phospholipids?

300

Alpha helices and beta sheets are examples of this structural level.

What is secondary structure?

300

Purines include adenine and guanine. Name the three pyrimidines.

What are cytosine, thymine, and uracil?

400

Heavy metals like gold and platinum are used in electron microscopy to increase this property.

What is contrast?

400

This structural polysaccharide makes up plant cell walls.

What is cellulose?

400

Name the sterol found in fungi and protozoa that is analogous to cholesterol in animals.

What is ergosterol?

400

The association of two or more polypeptides forms this level of protein structure.

What is quaternary structure?

400

In DNA, adenine pairs with thymine via these weak bonds.

What are hydrogen bonds?

500

In cell fractionation, centrifugation separates cell components into a pellet and this liquid fraction.

What is the supernatant?

500

Arthropods and fungi use this modified glucose polymer for exoskeletons and cell walls.

What is chitin?

500

This lipid type is essential for maintaining membrane fluidity in animal cells, preventing membranes from becoming too rigid or too fluid.

What is cholesterol?

500

Disulfide bridges form between two of these amino acids.

What is cysteine?

500

In DNA replication can only happen in this direction.

What is the 5′ to 3′ direction?

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