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Biology Unit 2 Study Guide
Answers
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Questions 1-12 You are not responsible for this information.
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13 Monomers link together to make polymers.
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14 Carbohydrates Lipids Proteins Nucleic Acids
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15 Provide energy (mono, di, and poly)
Store energy for a short time (poly) Form structures (poly)
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16 Mono-, Di-, and Poly- are the prefxes denoting how many sugar monomers are present. The number of sugars can give an indication of the amount of energy stored within the molecule.
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17 monosaccharide
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18 Monosaccharide = glucose & fructose
Disaccharides = sucrose and lactose Polysaccharides = starch, glycogen, cellulose and chitin
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19 Cellulose and chitin are both structural polysaccharides.
Chitin forms cell walls in fungi and exoskeletons in some animals. Cellulose forms cell walls in plants.
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20 Both starch and glycogen store sugar.
Starch is the sugar storage form in plants. Glycogen is the sugar storage form in animals.
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21 Starches are found in plants Potatoes Beans Plantains Corn
Actually, all green vegetables are capable of making starch.
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22 Glycogen is found in the muscles and livers of mammals.
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23 Waterproofing membranes Chemical messengers Form cell membranes
Store Energy
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24 Fats, oils, waxes, steroids
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25 Saturated fats: Unsaturated fats: Animal fats Full of hydrogens
Solids at room temp Relatively unhealthy Unsaturated fats: Plant oils Have fewer hydrogens Are liquids at room temperature Healthy
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26 The monomer of a protein = amino acid.
The polymer of a protein = polypeptide
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27 Amino acids are the building blocks of proteins.
Proteins are polymers made of amino acid monomers. Amino Acids link together (via peptide bonds) to form large structures called proteins (AKA: polypeptides). This small part linking together to form a large structure is analogous to links coming together to form a chain.
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28 Build muscle and bone Serve as enzymes
Fight infections (are called antibodies when doing this) Serve as doorways into the cell. Serve as regulators of cell activities.
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29 C H O N P
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30 DNA RNA
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31 Nucleotides
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32 5 carbon sugar Phosphate Nitrogen base
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33 DNA has deoxyribose sugar in it. RNA has ribose sugar in it.
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34 Enzymes
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35 Anything that speeds up a chemical reaction
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36 They lower the activation energy for the reaction.
They do not provide energy to the reaction…they just make the amount of energy needed to start the reaction be less.
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37 The amount of energy needed to start a reaction.
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38 Substrates are changed during enzymatic reactions.
Enzymes remain unchanged by the reaction and can be used again.
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39 Each enzyme has a special shape that directly matches its target substrate. This is analogous to how each lock has a particular shaped key that opens it. Wrong shaped key = no opened lock.
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