NCERT Solutions for Class 12 Chemistry Chapter 10 – Biomolecules (English Medium)
🧬 Get NCERT Solutions for Class 12 Chemistry Chapter 10 – Biomolecules with accurate answers and step-by-step explanations in an exam-friendly format. This chapter covers carbohydrates (mono/di/polysaccharides, glycosidic bond), proteins (amino acids, peptide bond, primary/secondary/tertiary structure, denaturation), enzymes, vitamins (A, B-complex, C, D, E, K), nucleic acids (DNA, RNA, nucleoside, nucleotide), and key biological functions in a simple, scoring way. Perfect for CBSE boards and NEET/JEE revision. ✅
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They are the basic building blocks of di-, oligo- and polysaccharides.
Examples: glucose, fructose, ribose.
• So a monosaccharide is a single carbohydrate unit.
• They usually have the general formula (CH2O)n (commonly n = 3 to 7).
• Monosaccharides contain a carbonyl group (aldehyde or ketone) and multiple –OH groups, which is why they are sweet and water soluble.
✅ Ribose and deoxyribose are monosaccharides that form the sugar part of RNA and DNA.
Examples: glucose, fructose, maltose, lactose.
Non-reducing example: sucrose.
• Tollens’ reagent: Ag+ → Ag (silver mirror)
• Fehling’s solution: Cu2+ → Cu2O (red precipitate)
Aldoses (like glucose) have –CHO directly.
Some ketoses (like fructose) still act reducing because in basic medium they tautomerise to an aldehyde form.
✅ If the anomeric carbon is tied up in a glycosidic bond (like in sucrose), the sugar can’t open up to give a free carbonyl group → non-reducing.
✅ Sucrose is non-reducing because both anomeric carbons (of glucose and fructose) are involved in the glycosidic bond, so no free –CHO can form.
1) Energy storage: Plants store carbohydrates mainly as starch, which is used as an energy reserve.
2) Structural support: Carbohydrates form cellulose in plant cell walls, providing strength and rigidity.
Cellulose is the main material of plant cell walls. It acts like a strong framework that helps plants stay upright and protects cells.
humans can digest starch easily,
but humans cannot digest cellulose (it acts as dietary fibre).
✅ Ribose
✅ 2-deoxyribose
✅ Galactose
✅ Fructose
Disaccharides (two sugar units)
✅ Maltose
✅ Lactose
• Disaccharides are made by joining two monosaccharides through a glycosidic bond (example: maltose, lactose).
✅ Lactose is “milk sugar”, and maltose is “malt sugar” formed during starch breakdown.
• During bond formation, one molecule of water (H2O) is released.
• The resulting bond is an O-glycosidic bond that joins the sugars into a disaccharide or polysaccharide.
✅ Example (sucrose):
Glucose + Fructose → Sucrose (joined by a glycosidic linkage) + H2O
Example: starch (α-linkage) is digestible, but cellulose (β-linkage) is not easily digested by humans.
✅ Difference from starch: Starch is the storage polysaccharide in plants, while glycogen is the storage polysaccharide in animals.
Starch: stored in plants (seeds, roots, tubers like potato)
✅ Amylose (15–20%): mostly unbranched, relatively more soluble
✅ Amylopectin (80–85%): branched, less soluble
Glycogen is a branched polymer of α-D-glucose (single main type, but highly branched).
Glycogen is more highly branched than amylopectin.
Amylopectin has longer branch segments (about 20–25 glucose units)
Glycogen has shorter branch segments (about 10–14 glucose units)
✅ Amylose has mainly C1–C4 glycosidic links, while branching in amylopectin and glycogen occurs through C1–C6 links.
(ii) Lactose on hydrolysis gives β-D-(+)- galactose and β-D-(+)-glucose.
• So each disaccharide splits into its two monosaccharide units:
✅ Sucrose + H2O → 𝛼– D-(+)- glucose + β-D- (-) -fructose
✅ Lactose + H2O → β-D-(+)- galactose + β-D-(+)-glucose
✅ Lactose is called milk sugar, and many people have lactase enzyme deficiency, causing lactose intolerance.
Starch has α-glycosidic linkages (mainly α-1,4 and α-1,6).
Cellulose has β-glycosidic linkages (β-1,4).
Starch
✅ α-1,4 linkage in amylose (mostly straight/helix)
✅ α-1,6 branching in amylopectin (branched)
Cellulose
✅ β-1,4 linkage throughout (straight, rigid chains)
👉 These straight chains align and form strong hydrogen bonding, making cellulose tough.
✅ Humans cannot digest cellulose because we lack the enzyme to break β-1,4 linkages (so cellulose acts as dietary fibre).
(i) HI
(ii) Bromine water
(iii) HNO3
✅ D-glucose is reduced and on prolonged heating with excess HI (often with red phosphorus), it gives n-hexane.
👉 Product: n-hexane (C6H14)
✅ Bromine water (a mild oxidising agent) oxidises only the aldehyde group (–CHO) of glucose to carboxylic acid.
👉 Product: D-gluconic acid (C6H12O7)
✅ Concentrated nitric acid oxidises both the aldehyde group (–CHO) and the primary alcohol group (–CH2OH) to carboxylic acids.
👉 Product: D-saccharic acid (glucaric acid), a dicarboxylic acid
• HI is a strong reducing agent.
• It replaces oxygen-containing groups step by step and finally converts glucose into a straight-chain hydrocarbon.
✅ Hence: glucose → n-hexane
• Bromine water is mild, so it oxidises only –CHO (not –CH2OH).
✅ Hence: glucose (aldose) → gluconic acid
• Nitric acid is strong, so it oxidises both ends of glucose:
○ –CHO → –COOH
○ –CH2OH → –COOH
✅ Hence: glucose → saccharic (glucaric) acid
✅ Strong oxidation with HNO3 gives a dicarboxylic acid, which proves glucose has a primary alcohol group at one end.
1) Glucose does not give usual aldehyde tests
✅ Even though glucose is expected to have an –CHO group, it:
👉 does not give 2,4-DNP test
👉 does not give Schiff’s test
👉 does not form an addition product with NaHSO3
2) Glucose pentaacetate does not react with hydroxylamine (NH2OH)
✅ If a free –CHO group were present, it should form an oxime, but it does not.
3) Glucose forms α- and β-methyl glucosides with methanol + dry HCl
✅ D-glucose + CH3OH (dry HCl) gives two glucosides (α and β), which is possible only if glucose exists mainly in a cyclic (ring) form.
👉 But these reactions fail, and glucose instead forms α/β glucosides, which strongly suggests that glucose exists mainly as a hemiacetal ring in solution (so the free –CHO is not readily available).
👉 Examples: valine, leucine
✅ Non-essential amino acids: Amino acids that are also needed by the body but can be synthesised in the body, so they may not be required in diet in sufficient amounts.
👉 Examples: glycine, alanine
Some amino acids cannot be made in the body (essential), so we must eat them.
Some amino acids can be made by the body from other nutrients (non-essential).
✅ The word “non-essential” does not mean unimportant; it only means the body can make them.
(i) Peptide linkage
(ii) Primary structure
(iii) Denaturation
✅ A peptide linkage (peptide bond) is the –CO–NH– bond formed when the –COOH group of one amino acid reacts with the –NH2 group of another amino acid, with loss of one H2O molecule.
✅ The primary structure of a protein is the exact sequence and number of amino acids linked in a polypeptide chain.
👉 Even a small change in this sequence can produce a different protein.
✅ Denaturation is the process in which a protein loses its native (natural) shape and hence loses biological activity, due to disturbance of bonds (mainly hydrogen bonds).
👉 It can be caused by heat, change in pH, etc.
✅ During denaturation, secondary (2°) and tertiary (3°) structures are destroyed, but the primary (1°) structure remains.
👉 Amino acid 1 (–COOH) + Amino acid 2 (–NH2)
→ –CO–NH– + H2O
This is a condensation reaction.
👉 It tells which amino acids are present
👉 In what order they are arranged
✅ This sequence controls the final folding and function of the protein.
👉 Heat/pH breaks H-bonds and weak interactions
👉 Protein unfolds (globular proteins lose shape; helices uncoil)
✅ Function is lost because shape decides function.
Example: boiling an egg causes coagulation of egg protein (albumin).
✅ That’s why high fever can affect enzyme activity, because enzymes are proteins and can denature at high temperature.
1. α-helix
2. β-pleated sheet
1) α-Helix
• The polypeptide chain coils into a right-handed helix.
• ✅ A hydrogen bond forms between:
👉 C=O of one amino acid and N–H of the amino acid four units ahead in the chain.
• The R-groups (side chains) project outward, so they can interact easily.
2) β-Pleated Sheet
• The polypeptide chains are stretched out and arranged side by side.
• ✅ They are held together by intermolecular hydrogen bonds between:
👉 C=O and N–H groups of adjacent chains/segments.
• The sheet looks like folds (pleats), and the R-groups extend above and below the sheet.
✅ Materials like hair and nails (keratin) have a lot of α-helix, while silk (fibroin) is rich in β-pleated sheets, which is why silk is strong and flexible.
✅ A hydrogen bond forms between:
👉 the C=O (carbonyl oxygen) of one amino acid residue and the N–H (amide hydrogen) of the fourth amino acid residue ahead in the same chain.
👉 Since these H-bonds are within the same chain, they are called intramolecular H-bonds.
✅ These repeated H-bonds hold the helix tightly and make it stable.
✅ Fibrous proteins are long, thread-like and insoluble, mainly used for structural support like hair, skin, and tendons. Example: Keratin (present in hair, wool, silk), Myosin (present in muscles), etc.
• Fibrous: elongated, rod-like or thread-like
• Fibrous: generally insoluble in water
✅ Examples: enzymes, hemoglobin, insulin, antibodies
• Fibrous: structural proteins (give strength and support)
✅ Examples: keratin (hair, nails), collagen (connective tissue), fibroin (silk)
• Fibrous: mainly have secondary (2°) structure (repeating pattern), less complex folding
✅ Fibrous proteins have more hydrophobic packing and strong cross-linking, which makes them tough and insoluble.
👉 H2N–CH(R)–COOH ⇌ H3N+–CH(R)–COO−
✅ This is called a zwitterion (overall neutral but has both + and − charges).
The –COO− part accepts H+ → acts as a base.
✅ In basic medium:
The –NH3+ part donates H+ → acts as an acid.
👉 इसलिए amino acids amphoteric होते हैं (both acidic + basic nature).
✅ At a particular pH (isoelectric point), amino acids exist mostly as zwitterions and show minimum movement in an electric field.
👉 Maltase catalyses the hydrolysis of maltose into glucose.
Maltase (acts on maltose)
Lipase (breaks fats/lipids)
Protease (breaks proteins)
✅ If temperature or pH goes far from the optimum, enzymes can denature and stop working properly.
👉 hydrogen bonds
👉 ionic interactions
👉 hydrophobic interactions
✅ Primary (1°) structure remains intact because peptide bonds are not broken (amino acid sequence stays the same).
👉 Many proteins become less soluble and may coagulate/precipitate.
✅ Extreme heat or big pH change can denature enzymes, which is why enzymes work best only in a narrow temperature and pH range.
1) Fat-soluble vitamins: A, D, E, K
2) Water-soluble vitamins: B-complex and C
✅ The vitamin responsible for blood coagulation (clotting) is Vitamin K.
👉 Water-soluble vitamins (B-complex, C) dissolve in water and are not stored much in the body, so they are usually needed regularly through diet.
👉 Vitamin K helps in the formation of important clotting factors in the liver, so it plays a key role in stopping bleeding.
✅ Green leafy vegetables (like spinach) are a common dietary source of Vitamin K.
✅ Vitamin C is essential for healthy gums and connective tissues (collagen formation) and helps prevent scurvy.
👉 Helps in vision, especially night vision
👉 Maintains healthy skin and mucous membranes
👉 Supports immunity
Deficiency disease:
👉 Night blindness (and severe deficiency can cause eye problems like xerophthalmia)
Important sources:
✅ Fish liver oil, carrots, butter, milk, eggs, green leafy vegetables (spinach)
👉 Needed for collagen synthesis (skin, gums, wound healing)
👉 Helps immune defence
👉 Prevents bleeding gums and weakness
Deficiency disease:
👉 Scurvy
Important sources:
✅ Citrus fruits (orange, lemon), amla, green leafy vegetables, strawberries, capsicum/pepper
✅ Vitamin C is water-soluble and can be destroyed by overcooking, so fresh fruits/vegetables give the best benefit.
The two main nucleic acids are DNA and RNA.
👉 mRNA carries the message from DNA
👉 tRNA brings amino acids
👉 rRNA forms ribosomes where proteins are made
✅ DNA is mainly in the nucleus, while different RNAs work mostly in the cytoplasm during protein synthesis.
✅ Nucleotide: Nitrogenous base + Pentose sugar + Phosphate group
👉 Example: adenosine = adenine + ribose
• A nucleotide is formed when one or more phosphate groups attach to the nucleoside.
👉 Example: AMP = adenosine + phosphate
✅ So, the main difference is the phosphate group:
• No phosphate → nucleoside
• Phosphate present → nucleotide
✅ Some nucleotides also act as energy molecules, like ATP (adenosine triphosphate), the “energy currency” of cells.
👉 A pairs with T and G pairs with C.
They pair only like this:
• A (adenine) with T (thymine) via two hydrogen bonds
• G (guanine) with C (cytosine) via three hydrogen bonds
✅ So, if one strand has A at a position, the other must have T there, and if one has G, the other must have C.
👉 5′–A T G C–3′
Then the other must be:
👉 3′–T A C G–5′
✅ The sequences are different, so strands are not identical.
✅ But each base is the correct partner, so they are complementary.
• A and G are purines (larger)
• T and C are pyrimidines (smaller)
So pairing is always one purine + one pyrimidine, keeping DNA width uniform.
| Category | Point | DNA | RNA |
|---|---|---|---|
| A) Structural differences | Sugar | Has deoxyribose sugar | Has ribose sugar |
| Strands | Usually double-stranded (double helix) | Usually single-stranded | |
| Nitrogen bases | A, G, C, T (thymine) | A, G, C, U (uracil) (U replaces T) | |
| Stability | More stable (good for long-term storage) | Less stable and more reactive (short-lived) | |
| B) Functional differences | Main role | Stores and transmits genetic information; can replicate | Helps in making proteins (expressing genetic information) |
| Types | One main type (genetic store) |
Three major functional types:
✅ mRNA (message) ✅ tRNA (brings amino acids) ✅ rRNA (forms ribosomes) |
|
| Location (general) | Mainly in nucleus (also mitochondria) | Made in nucleus but works mostly in cytoplasm (ribosomes) |
mRNA (messenger RNA)
tRNA (transfer RNA)
rRNA (ribosomal RNA)
Works like a blueprint for making proteins.
Matches amino acids according to the codons on mRNA.
Helps in proper protein assembly (structural + catalytic role).
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