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Published byDinah Sims Modified over 9 years ago
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Monomers and Polymers Monomers are small units that join together to form polymers. A polymer is large compound made of many monomers. Process in which polymers are formed is polymerization.
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Carbohydrates Compounds made of C, H, and O in a 1:2:1 ratio. Monosaccharides= simple sugar monomer. Polysaccharides= large polymers formed from monosaccharides.
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Uses of Carbohydrates Main source of energy for living things. Plants and fungi use for support and protection.
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Lipids Mostly made from C and H. Numerous shapes and sizes. Fats, oils, waxes, and steroids.
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Functions of Lipids Lipids store energy. Form waterproof coverings. Form our cell membrane!
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Lipid Bilayer Lipids can be water fearing or hydrophobic, and water loving, hydrophilic. Hydrophobic Hydrophilic
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Saturated and Unsaturated Fats Many lipids are found as long fatty acids. If a lipid chain has only single bonds between carbon atoms, it is considered saturated. If it has one or more double bond, it is called unsaturated.
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Nucleic Acids Macromolecules containing H, O, N, C, and P. Monomer is called a nucleotide. IT has a 5- carbon sugar, a phosphate group, and a nitrogenous base. Nucleotides join together by covalent bonds.
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Phosphate Nitrogenous Base 5-C sugar
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Depending on sugar, nucleotides form macromolecules called DNA or RNA. Deoxyribose v. Ribose
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Nucleic acids serve to transmit and store genetic information. This information helps form proteins, which we will discuss tomorrow.
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Proteins Contain N, H, C, and O. Made of monomers called amino acids. Amino acids have an amino group (-NH 2 ) on one end and a carboxyl group (-COOH) on the other.
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Many amino acids covalently bond to form proteins. Proteins have up to four levels of organization.
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Functions of Proteins Regulate the rate of chemical reactions. Regulate cell processes. Form bones and muscles. Transport substances in and out of cells. Help fight disease.
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