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An amino acid.
Amino acids are monomers, so they aren't macromolecules at all.
i don't think they are, amino acids contain something that sugars don't, and glucose (a simple sugar) is not a protein.
proteins
The monomers in proteins are called macromolecule. Monomers are bonded together by chemicals.
An amino acid.
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.
A single transfer RNA (tRNA) carries a single amino acid.
YES
The monomers of proteins are amino acids.
Yes, glucagon is a polypeptide (protein) hormone. Polypeptides are polymers of amino acid monomers.
amino acid
Amino acids ARE monomers- of Proteins: a polymer. Elements C,H,O,N and sometimes s and p make it up..
Amino acids are monomers, so they aren't macromolecules at all.
Amino acids are monomers, so they aren't macromolecules at all.
No. The amino acids are the monomers of proteins, while the carbohydrates or sugars are hydrogen-carbon molecules that are the main (or the first) molecule sources to form energy, mainly in the form of ATP.
i don't think they are, amino acids contain something that sugars don't, and glucose (a simple sugar) is not a protein.