For the Dna [sugar-phosphate] backbone there are two types of monomers - the ribose [5 carbon] sugar and the [PO4 minus] phosphate moiety. The Four Handshake Bases that form 'the rungs of the Dna Ladder' are the nucleotide base monomers. Their Names are the pairs Adenine with Guanine and the pairs Cytosine with Thymine.
the scientific name is hypobinkofel but in our terminology it is thisisfakeidiot cheers ;)
Monomers.
Cellulose mainly consists of beta-glucose monomers, unlike starch which is an alpha-glucose polymer.
What is the difference between monomers and polymers?
The monomers of protein are amino acids. There are 20 common amino acids. Some of the most common are Alanine, Glycine and Leucine.
For the Dna [sugar-phosphate] backbone there are two types of monomers - the ribose [5 carbon] sugar and the [PO4 minus] phosphate moiety. The Four Handshake Bases that form 'the rungs of the Dna Ladder' are the nucleotide base monomers. Their Names are the pairs Adenine with Guanine and the pairs Cytosine with Thymine.
the scientific name is hypobinkofel but in our terminology it is thisisfakeidiot cheers ;)
Monomers.
monosaccharides are the monomers of polysaccharides
Nucleotides are the monomers. More specifically, the monomers are: Adenine Guanine Cytosine Thymine
What is the difference between monomers and polymers?
Cellulose mainly consists of beta-glucose monomers, unlike starch which is an alpha-glucose polymer.
Monomers
No, amino acids are the monomers of proteins. The monomers of disaccharides are simple sugars.
Monomers are the building blocks of polymers.
The general name for monomers in carbohydrates is monosaccharid.