Macromolecules
Organic Molecules
Macromolecules 2
Enzymes
Water
100

What is the byproduct of dehydration synthasis?

H2O (Water)

100

Carbon has this many valence electrons.

What is four?

100

These are the four classes of macromolecules.

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

100

Enzymes are a specific type of what macromolecule?

What are proteins?

100

These bonds hold hydrogen and oxygen atoms together in a water molecule.

What is a polar covalent bond?

200

What does Adenine pair with in DNA?

Guanine

200

These are molecules that have the same elements and basic structure, but have a slightly different bonding order.

What are isomers?

200

This is the monomer for carbohydrates.

What are sugars?

200

This is the molecule that an enzyme binds to.

What is a substrate?

200

These bonds occur between water molecules.

What are hydrogen bonds?

300

What is the difference in saturated vs unsaturated fatty acids?

Saturated: has no double bonds (means there will be more hydrogens)

These are straight lines

Unsaturated: has double bonds

These bend because of the double bonds

300

This class of chemical is nonpolar and consists of only two elements.

What are hydrocarbons?

300

This reaction joins together the subunits of all macromolecules.

What is dehydration synthesis?

300

This is the place on the enzyme where binding takes place.

What is the active site?

300

Water generally takes this role in a solution.

What is a solvent?

400

What are the three parts of a nucleotide?

Phosphate, pentose sugar ring, and nitrogenous base.

400

This charged functional group is common in amino acids and fatty acids.

What is a carboxyl group?

400

What are the bonds that join nucleotides in a polymer of nucleic acids?

What are phosphodiester linkages?

400

This is the name for a molecule that mimics an enzyme's substrate.

Competitive Inhibitor

400

This term refers to the ability of water to flow upwards through a narrow space, resisting gravity.

What is capillary action?

500

What are the structures of the proteins? Name and describe them.

Primary - single amino acid sequence

Secondary - alpha helix and beta-pleated sheet

Tertiary - 1 polypeptide folded in on itself

Quaternary - 2 or more polypeptides joined together

500

This class of isomer only exists when a double bond is present.

What is a cis-trans isomer?

500

Unsaturated fatty acid chains are generally liquid at room temperature because of this.

What is a Carbon-Carbon double bond?

500

Change in pH, temperature, or salinity can cause this to happen to an enzyme, rendering it non-functional.

What is denaturation?

500

This water property is how sweat is able to cool your skin.

What is evaporative cooling?