AQA A Level Biology

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1.1.1 Biological Molecules: Key Terms

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Biological Molecules: Key Terms

  • There is much variety of life within and between organisms but the biochemical basis of life is similar for all living things
  • The key molecules that are required to build structures that enable organisms to function are:
    • Carbohydrates
    • Proteins
    • Lipids
    • Nucleic Acids
    • Water

  • Monomers are the smaller units from which larger molecules are made
  • Polymers are molecules made from a large number of monomers joined together in a chain

5 Biological molecules (1), downloadable IGCSE & GCSE Biology revision notes

 

the-key-biological-molecules-for-living-organisms

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The key biological molecules for living organisms

  • Carbohydrates, proteins, lipids and nucleic acids contain the elements carbon (C) and hydrogen (H) making them organic compounds
  • Carbon atoms are key to the organic compounds because:
    • Each carbon atom can form four covalent bonds – this makes the compounds very stable (as covalent bonds are so strong they require a large input of energy to break them)
    • Carbon atoms can form covalent bonds with oxygen, nitrogen and sulfur
    • Carbon atoms can bond to form straight chains, branched chains or rings

  • Carbon compounds can form small single subunits (monomers) that bond with many repeating subunits to form large molecules (polymers) by a process called polymerisation
  • Macromolecules are very large molecules
    • That contain 1000 or more atoms therefore having a high molecular mass
    • Polymers can be macromolecules, however not all macromolecules are polymers as the subunits of polymers have to be the same repeating units

Carbohydrates

  • Carbohydrates are one of the main carbon-based compounds in living organisms
  • All molecules in this group contain C, H and O
  • As H and O atoms are always present in the ratio of 2:1 (eg. water H2O, which is where ‘hydrate’ comes from) they can be represented by the formula Cx (H2O)y
  • The three types of carbohydrates are monosaccharides, disaccharides and polysaccharides

Types of Carbohydrates Table

Types of carbohydrate table, downloadable AS & A Level Biology revision notes

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Exam Tip

When discussing monomers and polymers, give the definition but also name specific examples eg. a nucleic acid is a polymer, made of nucleotide monomers.Remember, lipid molecules are not made from monomers or polymers as each fatty acid joins to a glycerol molecule, rather than to each other. Separate lipid molecules, such as triglycerides, are not held together by covalent bonds and therefore lipids cannot be classed as polymers.

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Author: Lára

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