macromolecules

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Macromolecules Large molecules in living cells are known as macromolecules --- “giant molecules” Macromolecules are made by joining smaller unites called MONOMERS together to for POLYMERS

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Macromolecules. Large molecules in living cells are known as macromolecules --- “giant molecules” Macromolecules are made by joining smaller unites called MONOMERS together to for POLYMERS. The process of joining together monomers is known as POLYMERIZATION. 4 groups of macromolecules. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Macromolecules

Macromolecules

• Large molecules in living cells are known as macromolecules --- “giant molecules”

• Macromolecules are made by joining smaller unites called MONOMERS together to for POLYMERS

Page 2: Macromolecules

The process of joining together monomers is known as POLYMERIZATION

Page 3: Macromolecules

4 groups of macromolecules

1.) carbohydrates

2.) lipids

3.) nucleic acids

4.) proteins

Page 4: Macromolecules

Carbohydrates• Made up of carbons, hydrogen and oxygen

atoms in a 1: 2: 1 ratio

• Uses:– Main source of energy– Structural purposes

• Monomers are known as MONOSACCHARIDES

- MONOSACCHARIDES join to form POLYSACCHARIDES

Page 5: Macromolecules

• The monosaccharides for carbs are simple sugars– Ex: Glucose, galactose, fructose

Page 6: Macromolecules

Lipids

• Made mostly from carbon and oxygen atoms– Ex. Fats, oils, waxes

• Uses:– Store Energy– Important factor in cell membranes– Chemical messengers

Page 7: Macromolecules

Lipids contain two parts:

1.) glycerol heads

2.) fatty acid chain tails

Page 8: Macromolecules

• There are two types of lipids1.) Saturated contain only single bonds

Ex. Solid fat

2.) unsaturated contain double bonds

Ex. Liquid fat

Page 9: Macromolecules

Nucleic Acids• Macromolecules containing

hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, carbon and phosphorus

• Monomers are known as nucleotides –Nucleotides join to form nucleic acids

Page 10: Macromolecules

There are three parts to a nucleotide

1.) 5 carbon sugar

2.) Phosphate group

3.) Nitrogen base

Page 11: Macromolecules

• Uses:–Store and transmit hereditary, or

genetic information

–Two types•DNA: deoxyribonucleic acid•RNA: ribonucleic acid

Page 12: Macromolecules

Protein• Macromolecules that contain nitrogen, carbon,

hydrogen, and oxygen

• Monomers are called amino acids

• Amino acids have an amino group (-NH2) and a carboxyl group (-COOH)

Page 13: Macromolecules

• Uses:–Control the rate of reactions and

regulate cell processes.–Form bones and muscles–Transport substance into or out

of cells–Help to fight disease

Page 14: Macromolecules

Protein have 4 levels of organization

• Straight chain• The amino acids within the chain can be

twisted or folded• The chain can be twisted• If the protein has more than one chain,

each chain is folded separately within the same space

Page 15: Macromolecules

Enzymes• Enzymes are proteins that serve as biological catalysts– A catalyst is a substance

that speeds up the rate of a chemical reaction

– Enzymes speed up chemical reactions that take place in cells

– Enzymes work by lowering activation energy

Page 16: Macromolecules

Enzymes Work

• Enzymes are substrate specific meaning that the enzyme can only bind with a specific type of molecule

Page 17: Macromolecules

• The enzyme temporarily joins the substrate forming an enzyme-substrate complex–The substrate is broken down into its

products and the enzyme is freed to repeat the process