1.a. Spider silk is made from protein, so hence the monomers would be amino acids.
b. Secondary (Should know from rote learning)
c. It is of great importance because the beta-folding allows the silk to be strong and allow the spiders to catch prey without them escaping.
2. It'd have to be the molecular formula of cysteine. Cysteine is the only amino acid to have sulfur in it, and so is the only one involved in the creation of di-sulfide bridges.
3. It's a carbohydrate. Straight forward definition question.
4. Everyone hates this question and I doubt you'll be asked it on the exam as it shows no biology understanding whatsoever. It's literally a jigsaw puzzle. Just join the common overlapping sections and you'll get
X-gly-met-cys-ser-cys-his-pro-arg-cys
Note: Yes I know it says nine amino acids, but it was pretty much agreed upon in my year that that was a typo.
5. a. No. There are a few different types of RNA (mRNA, tRNA, ribosomal RNA etc) and it's impossible to determine which type it is without further information.
b. Yes, as it is now possible to state that it is mRNA as only mRNA codes for the creation of amino acids.