Primary & Secondary Metabolites + Biomacromolecules
🍃 Primary Metabolites
- Found in all living organisms (animals, plants, microbes).
- Have clear roles in normal body functions (like amino acids and sugars).
- Example categories from Figure 9.1: Amino acids, sugars, nucleotides, etc. ✅
🌿 Secondary Metabolites
- Found only in plants, fungi, and microbes—not in animals.
- Their exact roles in host organisms aren’t fully understood yet.
- Many are super useful for humans! 🎉 Examples:
- Rubber, drugs (like morphine), spices, scents, pigments.
- Some protect plants in nature (ecological role).
Table 9.3: Cool Examples of Secondary Metabolites
Type | Examples |
---|---|
Pigments | Carotenoids, Anthocyanins |
Alkaloids | Morphine, Codeine |
Terpenoides | Monoterpenes, Diterpenes |
Essential oils | Lemon grass oil |
Toxins | Abrin, Ricin |
Lectins | Concanavalin A |
Drugs | Vinblastin, Curcumin |
Polymeric substances | Rubber, Gums, Cellulose |
🧬 Biomacromolecules
- Living things have two types of biomolecules:
1. Micromolecules (small!)
- Found in the acid soluble pool.
- Molecular weight: 18–800 daltons (Da).
- Examples: Sugars, amino acids (tiny building blocks). 🔬
2. Macromolecules (huge!)
- Found in the acid insoluble fraction.
- Molecular weight: >10,000 Da (except lipids!).
- Four types:
- Proteins
- Nucleic acids
- Polysaccharides
- Lipids
- Wait—lipids are weird! 🤔
- Their weight is <800 Da (should be micromolecules)…
- But they’re in the macromolecule fraction because they insoluble in acid!
⭐ NEET Must-Knows
- Primary vs. Secondary Metabolites: Primary = in all organisms, known functions. Secondary = only in plants/fungi/microbes, human uses (drugs, rubber).
- Secondary Metabolite Examples: Alkaloids (morphine), Terpenoides (essential oils), Toxins (ricin)—memorize Table 9.3! 💊
- Macromolecules: 4 types—proteins, nucleic acids, polysaccharides, lipids. Lipids are the exception (low MW but acid-insoluble).
- Molecular Weights: Micromolecules = 18–800 Da. Macromolecules = >10,000 Da (mostly).
- Lipid Paradox: Why are they in the acid-insoluble fraction? Because of their solubility, not size! 🧪