Lipids
Proteins
Nucleic Acids
Carbohydrates
Random
100

What is the monomer for a lipid?

extra points for drawing it!

Fatty acids and glycerol.

100

What is the monomer for a protein?

hint. (Pro-Amino!) extra points for drawing it!

Amino Acids

100

What is the monomer for Nucleic Acids?

extra points for drawing it!

Nucleotide

100

What are the monomers for a Carbohydrate?

What do their monomers make?

extra points for drawing it!

Monosaccharide

Polysaccharides

100

What is the formula for Glucose?

C6 H12 06

200

Saturated vs Unsaturated

Single carbon bonds are unhealthy. Unsaturated is healthy and has bends and double bonds.

200

What is the name of the bond that holds amino acids together?

peptide bond

200

What is the polymer for nucleic acids?

nucleic acids

200

What elements make up Carbs and what is the ratio?

Carbon Hydrogen Oxygen 1:2:1

200

What are the 8 characteristics of life?

maintains Homeostasis, Organization, Grows and develops, Reproduces, Adapts to environment, contains Cells, requires Energy, and Reacts to stimuli.

300

In what form are lipids commonly found?

Triglyceride form

300

What types of things do proteins make up in the body?

Collagen, elastin, insulin, antibodies, enzymes, and keratin.

300

What are the three components of all nucleotides?

Phosphate group, nitrogenous base, sugar

300

What carbohydrates store energy for plants? Animals?

Starch and Glycogen

300

Name all 5 functional groups and their chemical formulas

Hydroxyl -OH, Carbonyl -CO, Phosphate -PO4, Amino -NH2, and Carboxyl -COOH.

400

What distinguishes saturated fatty acids from unsaturated fatty acids?

Saturated have no double bonds; unsaturated do

400

What are the functional groups?

Hydroxyl and carbonyl

400

Which nitrogenous bases are found in nucleotides?

Adenine, guanine, cytosine, thymine, uracil

400

What is Chitin?

A carb, and it is the exoskeleton of insects and crustaceans. 

400

Eukaryote vs Prokaryote

Eukaryotes are more complex and have a true nucleus. Prokaryotes are simple and have no true nucleus.

500

What are phospholipids used for in living organisms?

As a barrier in cells

500

What are the four levels of protein structure?

  1. Primary structure: Polypeptide chain

  2. Secondary structure: Folds into alpha helix or beta pleated sheets

  3. Tertiary structure: Three-dimensional globular shape

  4. Quaternary structure: Combination of multiple proteins

500

What are the two types of 5-carbon sugars in nucleotides?

Deoxyribose and ribose

500

What is glycogen?

Stored in muscles and liver

500

Define Ion, Cation, and Anion

When a neutral atom gains or loses an electron. Positively charged ion (lost an electron). Negatively charged ion (gains an electron).