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Question
name:
date:
summary sheet
biological macromolecules
macromolecule\tmonomer\telements present\tstructure\tfunction\texamples
carbohydrate\t\t\t\t\t
lipid\t\t\t\t\t
protein\t\t\t\t\t
nucleic acid\t\t\t\t\t
Response
To fill the "Summary Sheet - Biological Macromolecules", we analyze each macromolecule:
1. Carbohydrate
- Monomer: Monosaccharides (e.g., glucose, fructose).
- Elements Present: Carbon (C), Hydrogen (H), Oxygen (O) (ratio ~\( \text{C}_n\text{H}_{2n}\text{O}_n \)).
- Structure: Monosaccharides link via glycosidic bonds; form chains (e.g., starch) or rings (e.g., glucose).
- Function: Primary energy source (e.g., glucose for ATP); structural support (e.g., cellulose in plants).
- Examples: Glucose, starch, cellulose, glycogen.
2. Lipid
- Monomer: No true monomer (composed of fatty acids + glycerol, or isoprene units for steroids).
- Elements Present: C, H, O (less O than carbs); some have P (e.g., phospholipids).
- Structure: Hydrophobic tails (fatty acids) + hydrophilic heads (e.g., in phospholipids); steroids have ring structures.
- Function: Energy storage (e.g., triglycerides); cell membrane structure (phospholipids); signaling (steroids).
- Examples: Fats, oils, phospholipids, cholesterol.
3. Protein
- Monomer: Amino acids (20 types, linked by peptide bonds).
- Elements Present: C, H, O, N (sometimes S, P).
- Structure: Primary (amino acid sequence) → Secondary (α-helix, β-sheet) → Tertiary (3D folding) → Quaternary (multiple subunits).
- Function: Enzymes (catalysis), structure (e.g., collagen), transport (e.g., hemoglobin), immunity (antibodies).
- Examples: Hemoglobin, insulin, enzymes (e.g., amylase).
4. Nucleic Acid
- Monomer: Nucleotides (sugar + phosphate + nitrogenous base: A, T/U, C, G).
- Elements Present: C, H, O, N, P.
- Structure: Polynucleotide chains (DNA: double helix; RNA: single strand).
- Function: Store/transmit genetic info (DNA); protein synthesis (RNA: mRNA, tRNA, rRNA).
- Examples: DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid), RNA (ribonucleic acid).
Filled Table (Sample):
| Macromolecule | Monomer | Elements Present | Structure | Function | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lipid | Fatty acids + Glycerol (or none) | C, H, O (±P) | Hydrophobic tails + hydrophilic heads (or rings) | Energy storage, membrane, signaling | Fats, phospholipids, cholesterol |
| Protein | Amino acids | C, H, O, N (±S) | 4-level folding (primary→quaternary) | Catalysis, structure, transport, immunity | Hemoglobin, insulin, amylase |
| Nucleic Acid | Nucleotides | C, H, O, N, P | DNA: double helix; RNA: single strand | Genetic info, protein synthesis | DNA, RNA |
This table summarizes the key properties of biological macromolecules.
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To fill the "Summary Sheet - Biological Macromolecules", we analyze each macromolecule:
1. Carbohydrate
- Monomer: Monosaccharides (e.g., glucose, fructose).
- Elements Present: Carbon (C), Hydrogen (H), Oxygen (O) (ratio ~\( \text{C}_n\text{H}_{2n}\text{O}_n \)).
- Structure: Monosaccharides link via glycosidic bonds; form chains (e.g., starch) or rings (e.g., glucose).
- Function: Primary energy source (e.g., glucose for ATP); structural support (e.g., cellulose in plants).
- Examples: Glucose, starch, cellulose, glycogen.
2. Lipid
- Monomer: No true monomer (composed of fatty acids + glycerol, or isoprene units for steroids).
- Elements Present: C, H, O (less O than carbs); some have P (e.g., phospholipids).
- Structure: Hydrophobic tails (fatty acids) + hydrophilic heads (e.g., in phospholipids); steroids have ring structures.
- Function: Energy storage (e.g., triglycerides); cell membrane structure (phospholipids); signaling (steroids).
- Examples: Fats, oils, phospholipids, cholesterol.
3. Protein
- Monomer: Amino acids (20 types, linked by peptide bonds).
- Elements Present: C, H, O, N (sometimes S, P).
- Structure: Primary (amino acid sequence) → Secondary (α-helix, β-sheet) → Tertiary (3D folding) → Quaternary (multiple subunits).
- Function: Enzymes (catalysis), structure (e.g., collagen), transport (e.g., hemoglobin), immunity (antibodies).
- Examples: Hemoglobin, insulin, enzymes (e.g., amylase).
4. Nucleic Acid
- Monomer: Nucleotides (sugar + phosphate + nitrogenous base: A, T/U, C, G).
- Elements Present: C, H, O, N, P.
- Structure: Polynucleotide chains (DNA: double helix; RNA: single strand).
- Function: Store/transmit genetic info (DNA); protein synthesis (RNA: mRNA, tRNA, rRNA).
- Examples: DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid), RNA (ribonucleic acid).
Filled Table (Sample):
| Macromolecule | Monomer | Elements Present | Structure | Function | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lipid | Fatty acids + Glycerol (or none) | C, H, O (±P) | Hydrophobic tails + hydrophilic heads (or rings) | Energy storage, membrane, signaling | Fats, phospholipids, cholesterol |
| Protein | Amino acids | C, H, O, N (±S) | 4-level folding (primary→quaternary) | Catalysis, structure, transport, immunity | Hemoglobin, insulin, amylase |
| Nucleic Acid | Nucleotides | C, H, O, N, P | DNA: double helix; RNA: single strand | Genetic info, protein synthesis | DNA, RNA |
This table summarizes the key properties of biological macromolecules.