4.1 Biological molecules

Biological Molecules – IGCSE Biology Study Notes

IGCSE Biology Topic 4.1 — The chemical elements in biological molecules, how large molecules are built, and how to test for each molecule.

Big Idea: All living things are made of the same types of biological molecules — carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, and DNA. These molecules are all built from smaller “building block” units joined together.

1. Chemical Elements in Biological Molecules #

Every biological molecule is made of chemical elements. You need to know which elements are in each type of molecule.

Molecule Elements it contains
Carbohydrates Carbon (C), Hydrogen (H), Oxygen (O)
Lipids (fats and oils) Carbon (C), Hydrogen (H), Oxygen (O)
Proteins Carbon (C), Hydrogen (H), Oxygen (O), Nitrogen (N), and often Sulfur (S)
DNA Carbon (C), Hydrogen (H), Oxygen (O), Nitrogen (N), Phosphorus (P)
Exam Tip — How to remember: Carbohydrates and lipids only contain C, H, and O. Proteins add Nitrogen (and sometimes Sulfur). DNA adds both Nitrogen and Phosphorus.

2. Large Molecules Built from Smaller Ones #

Large biological molecules are not made all at once. They are built by joining many small molecules together — like connecting pieces of a chain. You need to know which small molecules make up each large molecule.

Large Molecule Built from (small molecules)
Starch Glucose molecules joined together
Cellulose Glucose molecules joined together
Glycogen Glucose molecules joined together
Proteins Amino acids joined together
Lipids One glycerol + three fatty acids joined together
DNA Nucleotides joined together
Note: Starch, cellulose, and glycogen are all made from glucose — but they have different structures and different jobs. Starch stores energy in plants, glycogen stores energy in animals, and cellulose makes plant cell walls.

IMAGE NEEDED: Simple diagram showing glucose joining to form starch, and amino acids joining to form a protein chain

Google Images Search: “IGCSE biology monomer polymer glucose starch amino acid protein diagram educational”


3. Chemical Tests for Biological Molecules #

In biology, we can use chemical tests to find out which biological molecules are present in a sample. You must know the reagent, method, and result for each test.

Test 1: Starch — Iodine Solution Test #

How to do the test:
  1. Add a few drops of iodine solution to the sample
  2. Observe the colour change
  • Positive result (starch present): Blue-black colour
  • Negative result (no starch): Stays orange-brown (the colour of iodine solution)

Test 2: Glucose and Maltose — Benedict’s Solution Test #

This test detects reducing sugars, which includes glucose and maltose. Benedict’s solution is blue when cold.
How to do the test:
  1. Add Benedict’s solution to the sample in a test tube
  2. Place the test tube in a hot water bath for about 5 minutes
  3. Observe the colour change
  • Positive result (reducing sugar present): Turns brick-red / orange-red
  • Negative result (no reducing sugar): Stays blue
Important: The test must be heated. If you forget to heat it, you will not get a colour change even if glucose is present.

Test 3: Protein — Biuret Test #

How to do the test:
  1. Add sodium hydroxide (NaOH) solution to the sample
  2. Then add a few drops of copper sulfate (CuSO₄) solution (or use ready-made Biuret reagent)
  3. Observe the colour change (no heating needed)
  • Positive result (protein present): Turns purple / violet
  • Negative result (no protein): Stays blue

Test 4: Lipids — Ethanol Emulsion Test #

How to do the test:
  1. Dissolve the sample in ethanol (alcohol) — mix well
  2. Pour this mixture into a test tube of cold water
  3. Observe the result
  • Positive result (lipid present): A white, cloudy (milky) emulsion forms
  • Negative result (no lipid): The water stays clear
The cloudiness happens because lipids do not dissolve in water. When you pour the ethanol-lipid mixture into water, the fat droplets spread through the water and scatter light, making it look milky.

Summary: Chemical Tests at a Glance #

Molecule to test Reagent used Method Positive result
Starch Iodine solution Add drops directly Blue-black
Glucose / Maltose Benedict’s solution Add + heat in water bath Brick-red / orange
Protein NaOH + copper sulfate (Biuret) Add reagents, no heat Purple / violet
Lipid Ethanol + water Dissolve in ethanol, pour into water White cloudy emulsion
Exam Tip: For each test, make sure you know three things: the reagent, whether heating is needed, and the exact colour of a positive result. Exams often ask for specific colours — “blue-black” is more precise than just “dark colour.”

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