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Biological molecules
Descripción
Brief description of roles and structure of the 6 biological molecules (OCR A-level)
Sin etiquetas
biology
biological molecules
ocr
biology
a level
Mapa Mental por
megan hill
, actualizado hace más de 1 año
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Creado por
megan hill
hace más de 7 años
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Resumen del Recurso
Biological molecules
Carbohydrates
Lipids
Can exist as fats, oils and waxes
Made up of C,H and O
Vast majority are Triglycerides
roles of triglycerides
Energy reserves
electrical insulation eg. myelin in nerve cells
Thermal insulation eg.blubber
Metabolic source of water eg. in camels
waterproofing eg. the waxy cuticle in plant leaves
structure of triglycerides
Three fatty acid molecules combine with one glycerol molecule
fatty acids have a Carboxyl group(COOH)
Triglycerides are bad conductors and have no charge
Cholesterol-is also a lipid but is not a triglyceride
Made up of 4 carbon rings
Found in cell membranes
It's hydrophobic nature allows it to sit between the Phospholipid tails within the cell membrane
So it can work to regulate fluidity and strength of the membrane
Water
structure
One oxygen atom covalently bonded to two hydrogen atoms
oxygen atoms have slight negative charge and hydrogen atoms have slight positive charge, therefore water is a polar molecule
other polar molecules( e.g. salts,glucose, amino acids) will disolve in water, but non-polar molecules are insoluble in water.
Roles
Plays an important role in the blood, lymphatic,excretory and digestive systems, as it is very good at transportation due to being a solvent
properties
Thermal properties
High specific heat capacity-means aquatic species are more able to adapt to a stable environment
This means lots of heat is needed to make water evaporate from the body, so sweating is very effective at cooling us down
Density and freezing properties
solid from less dense than liquid form (so large bodies of water don't often freeze )
High density is also used for support and protection e.g. Amniotic fluid in the womb
cohesion and surface tension
Cohesion occurs because hydrogen bonds pull water molecules in at the surface
Cohesion is responsible for surface tension-allowing small organisms to walk on water
Proteins
Structure
long chains of amino acids
central Carbon atom attached to four groups
Amino group-NH
Amnio groups are basic-alkaline in water
Hydrogen atom-H
R group-varies between amino acids
Carboxyl group- COOH
Carboxyl groups are acidic
Anything with alkaline and acidic regions is amphoteric, meaning it can resist tendency to change its PH, therefore amino acids are amphoteric
There are 20 amino acids, all of which plants produce, however animals only produce 12 and so they need to consume the other 8
Two bonded amino acids=dipeptides Multiple bonded amnio acids=polypeptiedes.
amino acids are held together by polypeptide bonds
Nucleic Acids
Enzymes
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