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GCE CIE BIOL - Definitions of Important Biological Molecules

Chapter 2 Biological Molecules

May 3, 2020

2.2.b Define the terms monomer, polymer, macromolecule, monosaccharide, disaccharide and polysaccharide. 

Below are some important definitions that will come in handy for your GCE CIE Biology exams:

Macromolecule: a large biological molecule such as a protein, polysaccharide or nucleic acid.

Monomer: a relatively simple molecule which is used as a basic building block for the synthesis of a polymer; many monomers are joined together to make the polymer, usually by condensation reactions; common examples of molecules used as monomers are monosaccharides, amino acids and nucleotides.

Polymer: a giant molecule made from many similar repeating subunits joined together in a chain; the subunits are much smaller and simpler molecules known as monomers; examples of biological polymers are polysaccharides, proteins and nucleic acids.

Monosaccharide: a molecule consisting of a single sugar unit with the general formula (CH2O)n. 

Disaccharide: a sugar molecule consisting of two monosaccharides joined together by a glycosidic bond.

Polysaccharide: a polymer whose subunits are monosaccharides joined together by glycosidic bonds.

⚠️⚠️ If a  a ‘define’-type question arises in the GCE CIE Biology exam, make sure to precisely explain the meaning of the word, concept or phrase.

Yaaas! Done deal! 🤘

References: 

Jones, M., & Parkin, M. (2018). Cambridge International AS and A Level Biology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.