Bio Chem 1
Bio Chem 2
Bio Chem 3
Bio Chem 4
Bio Chem 5
100
Why do we study carbon?

We study carbon because life is built on it, cells are made up of it (25%) and they are in the four macro molecules. 

100

What is a molecule with the same molecular formula with different structures/shapes?

Isomer

100

Why does form=function?

Differences create important functional significance that differs based on shape. 

100
What is a macromolecule?

Smaller organic molecules that bonded together to create the 4 major classes. 

100

What are the four macromolecules?

Lipids, Carbohydrates, Proteins, and Nucleic Acids. 

200

How are polymers built?

Joins monomers by removing water, known as dehydration synthesis. (Condensation reaction)

200

How do you break a polymer? 

Doing hydrolysis (adding water), doing the opposite of how to create a polymer. Also known as digestion. 

200

What are the 3 classes of carbohydrates?

Monosaccharides, Disaccharides, and Polysaccharides. 

200

What are the group of polymers that are hydrophobic with water? Ex: facts, steroids, waxes, etc. 

Lipids!

200

What are phospholipids?

Creates a plasma membrane around cells, both hydrophobic, and hydrophilic. 

300

What is a structure of a bilayer?

They have hydrophilic heads which face out, and hydrophobic tails that face in. 

300

What are some natural steroids in your body?

Cholesterol, females have estrogen, males have testosterone. 

300
What is the macromolecule that makes up 50% of dry weight in most cells?

Proteins!

300

What are enzymes?

They are a type of protein that is a catalyst to make chemical reactions in the cell go quicker.

300

What are enzyme competitive and noncompetitive inhibitors? 

A competitive inhibitor looks like a normal substrate and fits in it, competing for the actual substrate to get the enzyme. Noncompetitive inhibitor doesn't enter the active site, instead it binds to anywhere else which then changes the shape of the active site. 

400

what are nucleic acids?

They are made from nucleotide sub units with carry info. 
400

What are examples of amino acids?

Hydrogen, amino group, carboxyl group

400

What are some examples of monosaccharides? 

glucose (C6H12O6), fructose, ad galcatose

400

What is the difference between the three classes of carbohydrates?

Monosaccharides: these are simple sugars.

Polysaccharides: more complex sugars, created by linked monosaccharides.

Disaccharides: double sugar.

400
What are some environmental affects on proteins?

Temperature, pH, and denaturation 

500

What is one function of each macromolecule? 

Carbohydrates- makes ATP, structure of cellulose and chitin

Lipids- Waterproofing, stores energy

Proteins- transport, enzymes

Nucleic Acids- stores genetic code/gives it out

500

What is collagen?

It is a structural protein. 

500

What are the levels of protein organization?

Secondary structure- pleated sheets and helices

Tertiary structure- the complex folding of a protein chain

Quaternary structure- many proteins linked together

500

What is a organic molecules, give the distinctive propertys.

amino, hydroxyl, carbonhyl, carboxyl, phosphate, and sulfhydryl

500

(Chapter Packet Question) Carbon-14 is often used for carbon dating, where scientists measure the rate of carbon-14 decay to determine the age of items. It contains six protons and eight neutrons. During the process of carbon-14 decay, one of its eight neutrons becomes a proton and an electron is emitted. Which of the following is the BEST explanation of what has occurred?

The resulting atom is now a different element because the number of protons has changed.