"Monosaccharide" is a category of chemical compounds, not a specific compound. Monosaccharides in general are not nucleic acids, though nucleic acids do contain one of two specific monosaccharides (ribose or deoxyribose).
No it is not a nucleic acid.It is a monosaccharide.
The monomer of Polysaccharides is monosaccharide. Proteins are made of amino acids, and Nucleic acids are made of nucleotides. Use wikipedia if you want to see how they're structured. I'm assuming that's what you're asking.
The 4 macomolecules are carbohydrates, lipids,proteins, and nucleic acids. Their monomers are: Carbohydrates- Simple sugar Lipids-Fatty Acid Protein-Amino Acids Nucleic Acid-Nucleotide
Nucleic acids
Nucleic acids are polymers of nucleotides.
They are the nucleotides . They make up nucleic acids
No. Nucleic acids are the building blocks of protein. There are various types of nucleic acids that form proteins.
A carbohydrate with five carbon atoms in its molecular structure.
No. Nucleic acids encode proteins.
"Monosaccharide" is a category of chemical compounds, not a specific compound. Monosaccharides in general are not nucleic acids, though nucleic acids do contain one of two specific monosaccharides (ribose or deoxyribose).
Nucleic acids. Dna = Deoxyribonucleic Acid Rna = Ribonucleic Acid
Nucleic acids make proteins.