Biological Molecules: Key Terms Flashcards
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
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
What is polymerisation
Carbon compounds can form small single subunits (monomers) that bond with many repeating subunits to form large molecules (polymers) by a process called
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