Biomolecules are large molecules essential for life. There are four main types:
Examples: Sugar (glucose), starches, fiber
Function:
Provides quick energy for cells.
Plants make carbohydrates through photosynthesis (using sunlight, water, and CO₂ to create glucose).
Used in cellular respiration (cells break down glucose to produce energy in the form of ATP).
Structure: Made of carbon (C), hydrogen (H), and oxygen (O) in a 1:2:1 ratio.
Examples: Butter, oils, waxes
Function:
Long-term energy storage (more energy per gram than carbohydrates).
Insulation (helps regulate body temperature).
Forms cell membranes (phospholipids).
Structure: Made of fatty acids and glycerol; does not dissolve in water (hydrophobic).
Examples: Meat, eggs, beans
Function:
Builds physical traits like hair, muscles, and skin.
Enzymes are a special type of protein that speeds up chemical reactions.
Transport (hemoglobin carries oxygen in blood).
Structure: Made of amino acids linked together in a chain.
Examples: DNA & RNA
Function:
Stores genetic information and provides instructions for making proteins.
DNA is found in the nucleus of eukaryotic cells.
RNA is used in protein synthesis (helps make proteins).
Structure: Made of nucleotides (sugar, phosphate, nitrogen base).
Viruses do not meet all characteristics of life because they cannot reproduce on their own.
Must infect a host cell to make copies of themselves.
Parts of a virus:
Capsid: A protein shell that protects viral genetic material.
DNA or RNA: Holds the instructions for making new viruses.
Function:
Speed up chemical reactions in the body.
Work by breaking molecules apart (digestion) or putting them together (DNA replication).
How enzymes work:
The substrate (reactant) must fit into the enzyme’s active site like a key in a lock.
Factors that affect enzyme function:
Temperature & pH: If too high or too low, the enzyme denatures (loses its shape and stops working).
There are two main types of cells:
Smaller & simpler than eukaryotic cells.
No nucleus (DNA floats in cytoplasm).
Larger & more complex than prokaryotic cells.
Has a nucleus (stores DNA).
Has many organelles (tiny structures with specific jobs).
Organelle | Organelle Function |
Nucleus | Holds DNA (genetic instructions). |
Ribosomes | Build proteins. |
Cell Membrane | Controls what enters & leaves the cell; maintains homeostasis. |
Mitochondria | Converts food into energy (ATP) through cellular respiration. |
Chloroplast | (Only in plants) Uses sunlight to make sugar (glucose) through photosynthesis. |
Cell Wall | (Only in plants) Provides protection & structure. |
Function: Holds instructions to build proteins.
Other names: Genes, chromosomes, chromatin.
Made of 4 nitrogen bases: A (Adenine), T (Thymine), C (Cytosine), G (Guanine).
The order of these bases makes each organism unique.
Humans have 46 chromosomes (23 pairs) in normal cells, but 23 chromosomes in sex cells (sperm/egg).
Happens before a cell divides.
Ensures each new cell gets an identical copy of DNA.
Purpose: Cells make proteins using DNA instructions.
Steps:
Transcription (in the nucleus): DNA → mRNA.
Translation (in ribosomes): mRNA → Proteins (amino acids).
Purpose: Cells divide for growth, repair, and reproduction.
Phases:
Interphase (cell grows & prepares to divide).
Mitosis (divides DNA into two identical cells).
Prophase → Metaphase → Anaphase → Telophase.
Cancer: Uncontrolled cell division that forms tumors.
Purpose: Helps cells maintain homeostasis.
Types:
Passive Transport: No energy needed.
Moves molecules from high to low concentration until balanced (equilibrium).
Active Transport: Requires ATP energy.
Moves molecules from low to high concentration (against the gradient).
Substitution: One base is replaced with another.
Silent Mutation: Does not change the protein.
Frameshift Mutations (more severe):
Insertion: Extra base is added.
Deletion: Base is removed.
Purpose: Creates sperm & egg cells.
Outcome:
4 genetically different cells.
Half the chromosomes (23 in humans).
Crossing over: Chromosomes swap DNA for genetic diversity.
Each trait = 2 alleles (one from mom, one from dad).
Alleles (versions of a gene):
Dominant (strong, uppercase): BB or Bb = trait shows.
Recessive (weak, lowercase): bb = trait only shows if both alleles are recessive.
Genotype (letter combination): BB, Bb, bb.
Phenotype (physical trait): Hair color, eye color.
Homozygous (BB or bb); Heterozygous (Bb).
Purpose: Converts sunlight into glucose (food for plants).
Equation: 6CO2+6H2O+sunlight→C6H12O6(glucose)+6O26CO₂ + 6H₂O + sunlight → C₆H₁₂O₆ (glucose) + 6O₂
Purpose: Converts glucose into ATP (usable energy).
Equation:
C6H12O6+6O2→6CO2+6H2O+ATP(energy)C₆H₁₂O₆ + 6O₂ → 6CO₂ + 6H₂O + ATP (energy)
Connection: The products of photosynthesis are the reactants for cellular respiration!