Carbs
Lipids
Nucleic Acids
Proteins
Misc.
100

This is what carbohydrates are used for by the body.

What is short-term energy?

100

These are the two subunits/monomers of lipids. 

What are fatty acids and glycerol?

100

This is the primary role of nucleic acids in your cells. 

What is store cellular information in the form of a code?

100

Proteins are polymers made up of these monomers. 

What are amino acids?


100

This is what saccharide means.

What is sugar?
200
If you take the monomer of a carbohydrate and combine it with one other monomer, you get this.

What is a disaccharide?


200

Lipids are described as this because they don't mix with water. 

Insoluble
200

This is the monomer of a nucleic acid. 

What is a nucleotide?

200

This is how many types of amino acids are used to make proteins.

What is 20?


200

This is what we add in a hydrolysis reaction to break down biomolecules and what we remove in a condensation reaction to build biomolecules. 

What is water?

300

This is the type of carbohydrate plants store for quick energy. Often not included on nutrition labels.

What is starch?

300

These are 3 uses of lipids.

What is long term storage, insulation, protection, cell membrane structure, steroids, and waterproofing?
300

These are 2 primary examples of nucleic acids. 

What is DNA or RNA?

300

These 2 things happen when proteins are denatured. 

What is their structure changes and they lose their function?

300

These are the three elements common to the 4 major types of biomolecules. 

What is C, H, and O?


400

Name 2 types of sugars.

What is gucose, fructose, galactose, sucrose, lactose, or maltose?

400

This is the name of the lipid that helps make up the structure of the cell membrane. 

What is a phospholipid?

400

These are the three groups that make up nucleotides.

What is a nitrogenous base, simple sugar, and a phosphate group?

400

As proteins, this is the role of antibodies.

What is protecting the body from infection?

400

These are the four levels of organization for protein folding. 

What is primary, secondary, tertiary, and quaternary?

500

These are the two tests we use to test for carbohydrates. 

What is the Iodine and Benedict's test?


500

Saturated fats contain none of these, making them solid at room temperature. 

What are double bonds?

500

Carbs and Lipids both have C, H, O in different ratios. These are the extra elements alongside C, H, and O that Nucleic Acids have. 

What is N and P?

500
Where hemoglobin is found and what it does.

What is blood and carries oxygen?

500
In order from the main source to the last resort, this is the correct order for the biomolecules that your body uses for energy.

What is carbs, lipids, and protein?