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CHAPTER 2 THE STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION OF MACROMOLECULES Polymer principles 1.Most macromolecules are polymers 2.An immense variety of polymers can be built from a small set of monomers
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Cells join smaller organic molecules together to form larger molecules. These larger molecules, macromolecules, may be composed of thousands of atoms and weigh over 100,000 daltons. The four major classes of macromolecules are: carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids. Introduction
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Three of the four classes of macromolecules form chainlike molecules called polymers. Polymers consist of many similar or identical building blocks linked by covalent bonds. The repeated units are small molecules called monomers. Some monomers have other functions of their own. 1. Most macromolecules are polymers
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The chemical mechanisms that cells use to make and break polymers are similar for all classes of macromolecules. Monomers are connected by covalent bonds via a condensation reaction or dehydration reaction. One monomer provides a hydroxyl group and the other provides a hydrogen and together these form water. This process requires energy and is aided by enzymes.
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The covalent bonds connecting monomers in a polymer are disassembled by hydrolysis. In hydrolysis as the covalent bond is broken a hydrogen atom and hydroxyl group from a split water molecule attaches where the covalent bond used to be. Hydrolysis reactions dominate the digestive process, guided by specific enzymes.
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Each cell has thousands of different macromolecules. These molecules vary among cells of the same individual, even more among unrelated individuals of a species, and are even greater between species. This diversity comes from various combinations of the 40-50 common monomers and other rarer ones. These monomers can be connected in various combinations like the 26 letters in the alphabet can be used to create a great diversity of words. Biological molecules are even more diverse. 2. An immense variety of polymers can be built from a small set of monomers
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