Macromolecules
Carbohydrates
Lipids
Proteins
Nucleic Acids
Structural Component :)
100

This element is the backbone of most organic molecules because it has four valence electrons that it can share in its outer shell.

What is Carbon?

100

Carbohydrates main fuction is this

What is short-term energy storage?

100

This is the main function of Lipids.

What is long-term energy storage.

100

These are the monomers of protiens.

What are amino acids?

100
Unlike other macromolecules, human receive nucleic acids from this source. 

What is your parents?

100

Why type of lipid is seen below?

What is a triglyceride?

200

This reactions builds polymers by building monomers.

What is dehydration reaction.

200

This polysaccharide is a major component of cells walls and cannot be digested by humans.

What is cellulose?

200
Lipids are composed of these elements

What are Carbon, Hydrogen, and Oxygen?

200
Aspects of Amino Acids are based on the physical and chemical properties of these.

What are R groups/side chains?

200

The monomers of DNA include these nucleotides (4)

What are Adenine, Guanine, Thymine, and Cytosine?

200

What is the relationship with water for the two parts of this macromolecule?

 

What is hydrophilic head and hydrophobic tale?

300

Excluding Methyl groups, this property describes the other five functional groups that make up macromolecules

What is polar/hydrophilic/soluble in water. 

300

This polysaccharide forms the exoskeleton of arthropods.

What is chitin?

300

These monomers make up lipids hydrophobic.

What are fatty acids and glycerol

300

These elements make up proteins (6).

What are carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, phosphorus, and sulfur?

300

The monomers of Nucleic Acids are made of these three parts.

What are the 5-carbon sugar, the phosphate group, and the nitrogen containing base?

300

Because of this structure, the phospholipid bilayer of cell walls are called this.


What is selective permeable?

400

This process breaks polymers into smaller monomers.

What is Hydrolysis?


400

When stored in the body of plants, glucose becomes this polysaccharide. 


What is starch?

400

The monomers of fats are joined via this bond.

What is an ester linkage?

400

These are degenerative brain diseases present in human that are caused by misfolded proteins. 

What is Alzheimer's and Parkinson's? 

400

This is the difference between Deoxyribose and Ribose sugars.

What is one less oxygen?

400

What level of protein structure is this and how is its shape determined?

What is Primary Structure and by genes?

500

This type of bond is created between monomers during a dehydration reaction.

What is covalent bond?

500

When stored in the body of animals, glucose become this polysaccharide.

What is glycogen?

500

This fatty acid has no double bonds in its hydrocarbon chain linking the maximum hydrogen and carbon atoms.

What is saturated fatty acids?

500

This covalent bond link the carboxyl group on one amino acid to the amino group of another animo acid. 

What is a peptide bond?

500

Where on the monomers do the bonds between nucleotides occur (what part)?

What are the phosphate group of one nucleotide and the sugar of another nucleotide.

500

What is the name and shape of this polymer?


What is DNA and double helix?

600

These have the same molecular formula but different structures.

What are Isomers?

600

The molecules of monosaccharides are always in multiples of this molecular fomula.

What is CH2O

600

This is a molecules that is composed of carbon and hydrogen and is a major component of fats. 

What are hydrocarbons?

600

These processes (3) can lead to the denaturization of protein's structure.

What is changes in pH, changes in salt concentration, and high temperatures?


600

Cytosine, Thymine, and Uracil are this type of Nitrogenous base.

What is Pyrimidines (one ring with 4 carbon and 2 nitrogen)?

600

What type of fatty acids is below and why does it have that name?

What is a unsaturated fatty acid and because there is a double bond?