poo contains these 3 building blocks and so does puke
Nucleotides which make up DNA contain carbon, hydrogen, phosphorus and oxygen.
Amino Acids and Proteins
Most of the early molecules play a critical role in living organisms, but the primary three building blocks are carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen (the essential components of a carbohydrate). Nitrogen is a necessary component for life as well, but it's primary use is held to be for the proper usage of the body's electrical discharges (the reason why nitroglycerine is used for people with heart troubles)
Short Answer is: fatty acids lack Nitrogen atoms. Amino acids are the building blocks of proteins. They are made up of the elements carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen. They have the functional groups carboxyl (COOH) and amine (H2N). Fatty acids or LIPIDS - [fats from animals, oils from plants] - are the building blocks of triglycerides. They are made of of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and DO NOT contain nitrogen. They have the functional groups carbonyl (HCO) and carboxyl (COOH).
Carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen
Amino acids
Carbon, hydrogen, and nitrogen -answered by osmary Jimenez-
Nucleotides which make up DNA contain carbon, hydrogen, phosphorus and oxygen.
The chemical building blocks of cells are lipids, carbohydrates, protein, and nucleic acid. They are all made up of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, phosphorus and sulfur. Or CHONPS.
There are six main elements that are the fundamental building blocks of life. They are, in order of least to most common: sulfur, phosphorous, oxygen, nitrogen, carbon, and hydrogen. The basis of life is carbon.
The chemical building blocks of cells are lipids, carbohydrates, protein, and nucleic acid. They are all made up of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, phosphorus and sulfur.
Amino Acids and Proteins
Animals need oxygen to breathe, and together with hydrogen, it makes water. Nitrogen is used by plants, and is one of the building blocks for proteins.
Most of the early molecules play a critical role in living organisms, but the primary three building blocks are carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen (the essential components of a carbohydrate). Nitrogen is a necessary component for life as well, but it's primary use is held to be for the proper usage of the body's electrical discharges (the reason why nitroglycerine is used for people with heart troubles)
Carbon is considered the building block of life and makes up macromolecules. Nitrogen, oxygen and hydrogen are the other 3 key building blocks.
Short Answer is: fatty acids lack Nitrogen atoms. Amino acids are the building blocks of proteins. They are made up of the elements carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen. They have the functional groups carboxyl (COOH) and amine (H2N). Fatty acids or LIPIDS - [fats from animals, oils from plants] - are the building blocks of triglycerides. They are made of of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and DO NOT contain nitrogen. They have the functional groups carbonyl (HCO) and carboxyl (COOH).
Carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen.