a triglyceride
Lipid monomers have 2 parts- two or three fatty acids bond to one glycerol
The three molecules attached to glycerol backbone are long chain fatty acids.
Three fatty acids are added to a glycerol molecule to form a triglyceride molecule. This process involves the removal of three water molecules, resulting in ester linkages between the fatty acids and the glycerol.
The monomers of triglyceride are glycerol and fatty acids. Glycerol is a three-carbon molecule with hydroxyl groups, and fatty acids are long hydrocarbon chains with a carboxylic acid group at one end. When these two components combine through dehydration synthesis, they form a triglyceride molecule with three fatty acid chains attached to the glycerol backbone.
Fatty acids (apex)
glycerol. Glycerol serves as the backbone to which the three fatty acids are attached in a triglyceride molecule.
Glycerol
Fatty acids are known as isomers. Glycerol are also isomers.
Lipid monomers have 2 parts- two or three fatty acids bond to one glycerol
A triglyceride is made up of three fatty acids and one molecule Glycerol, C3H5(OH)3.
fatty acids and glycerol
The three molecules attached to glycerol backbone are long chain fatty acids.
Three fatty acids are added to a glycerol molecule to form a triglyceride molecule. This process involves the removal of three water molecules, resulting in ester linkages between the fatty acids and the glycerol.
The monomers of triglyceride are glycerol and fatty acids. Glycerol is a three-carbon molecule with hydroxyl groups, and fatty acids are long hydrocarbon chains with a carboxylic acid group at one end. When these two components combine through dehydration synthesis, they form a triglyceride molecule with three fatty acid chains attached to the glycerol backbone.
The triglyceride molecule consists of three lipids bonded one each to the three Carbons of glycerol.
A triglyceride is a macromolecule composed of one glycerol molecule bonded to three fatty acids.
GLYCEROL