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Topic 1-FAQ’s
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macromolecules
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Proteins Monomer: Polymer:
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What are the 3 parts of an amino acid?
A. Amino Group B. Carboxyl Group C. “R” Group D. All of the above?
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Answer: D
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Enzymes Made up of proteins
Biological Catalysts-speed up rate of reactions for living things Do this by lowering activation energy Example: lactase Unchanged by rxn Lactase breaks down lactose. What would happen if it wasn’t there? Would have to WAIT for it to be broken down-and people who are lactose intolerant-does it happen quickly?
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Enzymes Shape is REALLY important Active site + substrate must match
Enzymes stop working if: pH is altered Temperature is altered
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What are enzymes? Lipids needed for storing fat
Proteins that act as biological catalysts Nucleic acids used for storing genetic information Carbohydrates needed for quick energy
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Answer: B
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How do enzymes act as catalysts?
They speed up the rate of a reaction by lowering activation energy They slow down the rate of a reaction by increasing activation energy They speed up the rate of a reaction by increasing the activation energy They slow down the rate of a reaction by lowering the activation energy
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Answer: A
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If the temperature of an enzyme is drastically increased, what will happen?
It will continue working It will eventually stop working, because it will change shape or become denatured It will stop working because its substrate (or what it is working on) will break down It will rapidly speed up the reaction
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Answer: B
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Lipids Monomer: Fatty acids and glycerol
Examples: fats, oils, cholesterol, waxes Primary component of cell wall Storage of long term energy
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What is a fatty acid? The monomer of a lipid
A long chain of carbons and hydrogens Can be saturated or unsaturated All of the above
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Answer: D
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Nucleic Acids Monomer: Nucleotide-3 parts Elements: CHOPN
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Nucleic Acids Role for living things: storage of genetic information
Examples: DNA, RNA
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What is DNA made of? Carbohydrates Lipids Proteins Nucleic Acids
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Answer: D
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What elements do nucleic acids contain?
CHO CHOSN CHOPN
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Answer: C
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What is the role of nucleic acids for living things?
Speed up the rate of reactions Storing genetic information Storing of energy Structure
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Answer: B
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Carbohydrates Monomer: monosaccharides (simple sugars)
Polymer: polysaccharide (ex. starch) Energy source
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Carbo Hydrate Formula: C6H12O6 Divide by six: C H2O
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What is the polymer of a carbohydrate?
Monosaccharide Polysaccharide Nucleic Acid Amino Acid
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Answer: B
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Chemistry Bond-how two atoms are held together
Ionic bond-transfer of elections (weak) Covalent bond-sharing of elections (strong)
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Importance of carbon? Carbon has 4 electrons in its outermost shell, which means it can make 4 covalent bonds This allows it to make huge complex structures that make up living things (carbs, lipids, proteins, nucleic acids)
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Organic Molecules Have Carbon and Hydrogen
All living things are made up of organic molecules (proteins, carbs, lipids, nucleic acids)
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Which of the following is matched up correctly:
Ionic bond-sharing of electrons Covalent bond-sharing of electrons Ionic bond-strong Covalent bond-weak
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Answer: B
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What about carbon makes it great at making large complex molecules?
Its ability to make 4 covalent bonds Its ability to make 4 ionic bonds The fact it has neutrons The fact it has protons
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Answer: A
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Dehydration Synthesis
Losing a water molecule to join two monomers to make a polymer Aka polymer synthesis
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Hydrolysis Splitting a water molecule to break a bond
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The linking of two monomers by losing a water molecule is
Polymerization Hydrolysis Dehydration synthesis Both A and C
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Answer: D
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Polar vs. Non Polar Polar Non polar Electrons favor one side
Ex: water (H end more positive, O end more negative) Electrons evenly dispersed
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Hydrogen Bonds Hydrogen-positively charged
Bonds with negatively charged atoms
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Important properties of H2O
Cohesion Adhesion High specific heat Universal Solvent Density
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Why is water a polar molecule?
Its electrons are evenly distributed Its oxygen end is really positive Its hydrogen end is more positive than the oxygen end Its hydrogen end is more negative than the oxygen end
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Answer: C
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In the diagram, why is the hydrogen attracted to the oxygen?
It is forming a hydrogen bond because the positive hydrogen is attracted to the negative oxygen It is forming an ionic bond It is forming a covalent bond
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Answer: A
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