The suffix -ate indicates the presence of three oxygen atoms in the -ate molecule. e.g. copper carbonate is CuCO3- the Cu is the copper, the C is the carbon and the O3 is the -ate
protein
The three parts of an ATP, adenosine triphosphate, molecule are:A sugar (ribose)3 phosphates (the energy is stored in the unstable covalent phosphate bonds)Adenine (a double ring of carbon and nitrogen)
The three parts of an ATP, adenosine triphosphate, molecule are:A sugar (ribose)3 phosphates (the energy is stored in the unstable covalent phosphate bonds)Adenine (a double ring of carbon and nitrogen)
One glycerol molecule and three fatty acid molecule
Adenine , pentose , phosphate .
The suffix -ate indicates the presence of three oxygen atoms in the -ate molecule. e.g. copper carbonate is CuCO3- the Cu is the copper, the C is the carbon and the O3 is the -ate
protein
two layers of phospholipids called the lipid bilayer
Nitrogenous base, sugar and a phosphate group.
Hydrogen
The three parts that make up nucleotides are a phosphate molecule, a 5-carbon ribose sugar and a nitrogenous base. DNA and RNA make up nucleotide chains.
Lipid monomers have 2 parts- two or three fatty acids bond to one glycerol
A nucleotide is made of three parts. Those parts are: a five carbon ribose sugar, a phosphate molecule, and a nitrogenous base (adenine, guanine, cytosine, or uracil).
A triglyceride is made of three long chain fatty acids (hydrocarbons) attached to one molecule of glycerol.
The three parts of an ATP, adenosine triphosphate, molecule are:A sugar (ribose)3 phosphates (the energy is stored in the unstable covalent phosphate bonds)Adenine (a double ring of carbon and nitrogen)
You have three molecules of fatty acids and one molecule of glycerol. The fatty acids are usually have 16 to 20 carbon atoms in them.