QUESTION IMAGE
Question
- macromolecules are also known as polymers.
- if all the macromolecules are mainly made up of carbon (c), hydrogen (h) and oxygen (o), explain how are they different?
Brief Explanations
Macromolecules (carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, nucleic acids) differ in:
- Element ratios: Carbohydrates have a 1:2:1 C:H:O ratio; lipids have far more H relative to O; proteins/nucleic acids add N (and S for proteins, P for nucleic acids).
- Monomer units: Carbohydrates use monosaccharides, lipids use fatty acids/glycerol, proteins use amino acids, nucleic acids use nucleotides.
- Structure/function: Varied 3D shapes lead to distinct roles (e.g., energy storage for carbs/lipids, enzymatic work for proteins, genetic storage for nucleic acids).
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Macromolecules (like carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids) differ despite sharing C, H, O due to three key factors:
- Different ratios of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen (e.g., carbohydrates have a 1:2:1 C:H:O ratio, while lipids have a much higher proportion of hydrogen relative to oxygen).
- Unique monomer building blocks (carbohydrates use monosaccharides, lipids use fatty acids and glycerol, proteins use amino acids, nucleic acids use nucleotides; proteins and nucleic acids also include additional elements like nitrogen, sulfur, or phosphorus).
- Distinct 3-dimensional structures, which lead to their specialized biological functions (e.g., energy storage, enzymatic activity, genetic information storage).