Glucose
Sugars are the simplest kinds of carbohydrates. example glucose, lactose (from milk), sucrose and maltose.
Monosaccharides. Some examples are:
Galactose
Fructose
Maltose
Monosaccharide
Monosaccharide.
nucleotides
The monomer units of carbohydrates are simple sugars such as glucose.
monomer
Amino acids are the basic monomer that forms polypeptides.
Simple sugars like glucose, fructose, and galactose are carbohydrates that are monomers. They are also structural isomers. All three have the chemical formula C6H12O6, but differ in the way that the atoms are bonded together.
Amino Acids.
The basic building block for a polymer is a monomer which are rather smaller than the resultant polymer.
Yes it is true. They build up the carbohydrates
The basic monomer for proteins is amino acid.
A Disaccharide, or double sugar, is comprised of two monosaccharides (simple sugars) through a dehydration reaction. So a monomer for any disaccharide can be any basic isomerism of any monosaccharide such as: glucose, fructose, or galactose.
That is the amino acid.
One phosphate group, five-carbon sugar and nitrogenous base are the three basic chemical constituents that every nucleotide is comprised of. They act as the subunit or monomer of nucleic acids such as RNA and DNA.