A major component of cells<|>A polar molecule due to uneven distribution of charge<|>Used as a metabolite in metabolic reactions such as condensation and hydrolysis<|>A solvent in which many metabolic reactions occur<|>Has a high heat specific capacity, minimising temperature fluctuations in living things<|>Has a relatively large latent heat of vaporisation, providing a cooling effect with little water loss<|>Strong cohesion between molecules enables effective transport of water in tube-like transport cells
Small organic molecules used as the building blocks of complex carbohydrates<|>Have a varying number of carbon atoms, e.g. glyceraldehyde (triose), ribose (pentose), glucose (hexose)<|>Glucose is the main substrate for respiration and has two isomers, alpha and beta
A polysaccharide made of chains of beta glucose monomers with amino acid side chains - one OH group of each beta glucose molecule is replaced with an amino acid
One of the fatty acids of a triglyceride is substituted by a phosphate-containing group, phosphate heads are hydrophilic and tails are hydrophobic so they form micelles in water
Primary structure is the order and number of amino acids
Secondary structure is the shape the chain of amino acids makes (alpha helix or beta pleated sheet), determined by bonding (hydrogen, ionic, disulphide)
Tertiary structure is the 3D shape of the protein (globular or fibrous)
A linear polysaccharide that is the main component of the cell wall in plants and is made up of many beta glucose molecules joined by B-14 glycosidic bonds
A linear polysaccharide that is made up of chains of beta glucose molecules with amino acid side chains and is found in the exoskeletons of insects and crustaceans as well as fungal cell walls