The monomers in a nuclei acid is basic component. This is in DNA and RNA.
im pretty sure they are nucleotides
proteins
The components of a lipid molecule are CH2 monomers in the Tail, and a carboxylic acid at it's Head End.
An amino acid.
Enzymes are a type of protein, which are amino acid polymers.
Amino acids are monomers, so they aren't macromolecules at all.
Yes, glucagon is a polypeptide (protein) hormone. Polypeptides are polymers of amino acid monomers.
Nucleic acid
Nuclei acid
Ethylene glycol + Terephthalic acid
proteins
The monomers in nucleic acids are nucleotides. In total there are eight.In RNA there are four:adenylic acid (AMP)cytidylic acid (CMP)guanylic acid (GMP)uridylic acid (UMP)In DNA there are a different four:deoxyadenylic acid (dAMP)deoxycytidylic acid (dCMP)deoxyguanylic acid (dGMP)thymidylic acid (dTMP)
The monomers of proteins are amino acids.
DNA is an abbreviation for deoxyribonucleic acid.
Amino acids ARE monomers- of Proteins: a polymer. Elements C,H,O,N and sometimes s and p make it up..
If it is an RNA virus, it has ribonucleic acid. If is a DNA virus it has deoxyribonucleic acid.
A nucleic acid is a polymer. Its monomers are glycerol and fatty acids. Hope I helped :)
Single amino acids are monomers, and monomers of amino acids join by peptide bonds to form polypeptide polymers.A polymer consisting of two monomers is a dimer.