Online Journals On Biomolecules And Their Synthetic Analogs
A biomolecule or biological molecule may be a loosely used term for
molecules present in organisms that are essential to at least one or more typically biological processes, like cellular division , morphogenesis, or development.
Biomolecules include large
macromolecules (or polyanions) like
proteins, carbohydrates, lipids, and nucleic acids, also as small
molecules like primary metabolites, secondary metabolites and natural products. A more general name for this class of fabric is biological materials.
Biomolecules are usually [citation needed] endogenous, produced within the organism but organisms usually need exogenous biomolecules, for example certain nutrients, to survive. Biology and its subfields of
biochemistry and biology study
biomolecules and their reactions. Most
biomolecules are organic compounds, and just four elements—oxygen, carbon, hydrogen, and nitrogen make up 96% of the human body's mass. But many other elements, like the varied biometals, are present in small amounts. The uniformity of both specific sorts of
molecules (the biomolecules) and of certain metabolic pathways are invariant features among the wide diversity of life forms; thus these
biomolecules and metabolic pathways are mentioned as "biochemical universals" or "theory of fabric unity of the living beings", a unifying concept in biology, along side cell doctrine and
evolution theory.
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