No
No, nucleotides are not made up of lipids. Nucleotides are organic molecules that are composed of a phosphate group, a pentose sugar (ribose or deoxyribose), and a nitrogenous base. Lipids are a separate class of organic compounds that include fats, oils, and waxes.
Monosaccharides make up carbohydrates. Amino acids make up proteins. fatty acids and glycerols for lipids. Nucleotides for nucleic acids
of the choices: proteins starches nucleotides lipids nucleotides are not macromolecules
No, they are made of carbon
The monomers that make up lipids are fatty acids and glycerol.
Carbohydrates: starch Lipids: Glycerol Proteins: polypeptides nucleic acid: nucleotides
glycerol and fatty acids make up lipids.
Nucleic acids are made from nucleotides. The nucleotides are adenine, guanine, thymine, and cytosine. They make up DNA, which is a nucleic acid.
Neither, a carbohydrate is a sugar, proteins are amino acids, lipids are fats! Nucleotides are what make DNA and RNA! They are considered a monomer
Neither, a carbohydrate is a sugar, proteins are amino acids, lipids are fats! Nucleotides are what make DNA and RNA! They are considered a monomer
nucleotides
Peptide bonds are primarily found in proteins. Lipids are made up of fatty acids and glycerol, while nucleic acids contain nucleotides.