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NotesBiologyTopic 2.1Phospholipids and amphipathic molecules
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2.1.63 min read

Phospholipids and amphipathic molecules

IB Biology • Unit 2

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Contents

  • What a phospholipid is
  • Why it is amphipathic, and how it forms
  • Exam-style question
The big idea: A phospholipid is a lipid with a water-loving head and two water-fearing tails.

Because one part likes water and the other part avoids it, a phospholipid is described as amphipathic.

This single property is the reason phospholipids can build the membranes around every cell.

A single phospholipid: a hydrophilic phosphate head joined through glycerol to two hydrophobic fatty-acid tails.

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Phospholipid
A lipid built from one glycerol, two fatty acids and a phosphate-containing head group.
Amphipathic
Having both a hydrophilic (water-loving) part and a hydrophobic (water-fearing) part in the same molecule.
Hydrophilic
Water-loving — mixes with / is attracted to water. (The phosphate head is hydrophilic because it is polar/charged.)
Hydrophobic
Water-fearing — does not mix with water. (The fatty-acid tails are hydrophobic because they are non-polar.)
Picture a tadpole: Draw a phospholipid as a circle with two wavy tails, like a tadpole:

round head = the phosphate group → hydrophilic (likes water)

two tails = the fatty acids → hydrophobic (avoid water)

The glycerol is the small joint in the middle that holds the head and tails together.

A phospholipid has three parts joined to one glycerol backbone: a phosphate group at one end and two fatty-acid chains at the other.

The two ends behave in opposite ways towards water — and that split personality is exactly what makes the molecule useful.

Head — hydrophilic

  • Made of the phosphate group (plus glycerol)
  • Is polar / charged
  • Attracted to water — dissolves towards it
  • Points out towards the watery surroundings

Tails — hydrophobic

  • Made of two fatty-acid chains
  • Are non-polar (long hydrocarbon chains)
  • Repelled by water — turn away from it
  • Point in / together, away from water
Amphipathic = both, in one molecule: The whole word is the answer: 'amphi' = both, 'pathic' = feeling.

A phospholipid feels both ways about water — its head is hydrophilic and its tails are hydrophobic at the same time.

A molecule that is only water-loving (like glucose) or only water-fearing (like a triglyceride) is not amphipathic.
How a phospholipid is built — condensation: A phospholipid is assembled by condensation reactions — the same bond-making, water-releasing reaction that builds other macromolecules.

Each fatty acid joins the glycerol by a condensation reaction that forms an ester bond and removes one water molecule (H₂O). The phosphate group joins the third position of the glycerol in the same water-releasing way.

So building one phospholipid releases several water molecules — condensation builds, hydrolysis (adding water) would break it apart again.
Glycerol
A small 3-carbon molecule that acts as the backbone; the fatty acids and the phosphate head all attach to it.
Fatty acid
A long hydrocarbon chain; non-polar, so it is hydrophobic. A phospholipid has two of them as its tails.
Condensation reaction
A reaction that joins two molecules and releases a water molecule (H₂O). It builds the ester bonds that link the fatty acids to glycerol.
Ester bond
The bond formed by condensation between a fatty acid and the glycerol backbone.
Phospholipid vs triglyceride — the one swap: A triglyceride (the energy-storage lipid from 2.1.4) has the same glycerol backbone, but three fatty-acid tails and no phosphate.

A phospholipid swaps one of those tails for a phosphate head. That single change is what turns an all-hydrophobic storage molecule into an amphipathic membrane molecule.
FeaturePhospholipidTriglyceride
Backbone1 glycerol1 glycerol
Fatty-acid tailsTWO fatty acidsTHREE fatty acids
Third position on glycerola phosphate-containing heada third fatty acid
Overall charge spreadamphipathic (head ≠ tails)all non-polar (hydrophobic)
Soluble part?the head dissolves in waternone — fully water-repelling
Main jobbuilds cell membranesstores energy

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How this is tested: On Paper 1A you are often shown several structural formulae and asked to select the amphipathic molecule — the one with both a hydrophilic part and a hydrophobic part. You may also be shown molecular diagrams and asked to pick the phospholipid (glycerol + two fatty acids + a phosphate head — not three tails).

On Paper 2 a phospholipid is often drawn with its head labelled X and its tails labelled Y, and you must state the property of each region — head = hydrophilic, tails = hydrophobic.

IB-style question — state the properties of a phospholipid's regions

A phospholipid is shown with its head region labelled X and its two tail regions labelled Y. State one property of region X and one property of region Y, and use these to explain why the molecule is described as amphipathic. [3]

How to score all three marks

  1. Region X (the head). State that the head is hydrophilic — it is attracted to / mixes with water because it contains the polar phosphate group.
  2. Region Y (the tails). State that the tails are hydrophobic — they are repelled by / do not mix with water because the fatty-acid chains are non-polar.
  3. Link to amphipathic. Because the same molecule has both a hydrophilic part (X) and a hydrophobic part (Y), it is amphipathic. (Mark 1: X hydrophilic. Mark 2: Y hydrophobic. Mark 3: amphipathic = both parts in one molecule.)

Final answer

X (head) is hydrophilic — it is attracted to water (polar phosphate). Y (tails) are hydrophobic — they are repelled by water (non-polar fatty acids). Having both in one molecule makes the phospholipid amphipathic.

A single phospholipid: a hydrophilic phosphate head joined through glycerol to two hydrophobic fatty-acid tails.

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✓ How to spot the phospholipid in a 'select' question: Reject any molecule that is only water-loving or only water-fearing.

The phospholipid is the 'tadpole': one round (phosphate) head + two tails. If a diagram shows three tails and no head, that is a triglyceride, not a phospholipid.

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the term used to describe a molecule that contains both a water-loving part and a water-fearing part. [1 mark]

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2.1.1Carbon and building macromolecules
2.1.2Monosaccharides and disaccharides
2.1.3Polysaccharides: structure and function
2.1.4Triglycerides and fatty acids
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