Nucleic acids are made up of monomers called nucleotides, which consist of; a sugar, a phosphate part and an N-containing base.
There are four different nucleotides; Adenine, Thymine, Cytosine and Guanine, with Adenine and Thymine as a pair and Guanine and Cytosine as a pair, because of this they are known as "complimentary pairs".
These can be easily remembered by: All Teachers Go Crazy
The four bases, Adenine, Thymine, Guanine, and Cytosine
The Sugar, and
The Phosphate
No, DNA is a nucleic acid. The monomers of DNA are nucleotides - each of which is made up of a sugar, a phosphate and a nitrogenous base.
No, the monomers which make up DNA are nucleotides.
Nucleic acids are made up of monomers called nucleotides, which consist of; a sugar, a phosphate part and an N-containing base.
Nucleic acids make up them. They are the monomers
It's a nucleic acid, made up of monomers called nucleotides.
No, nucleotides are the monomers that make up Nucleic Acids.
Nucleic acids.
The monomers of nucleic acids are nucleotides.Of polysaccharides: monosaccharides.Of polypeptides (the chains that make up proteins): amino acids.Lipids are macromolecules, but are not polymers, so they do not have monomers.
Monosaccharides, amino acids, nucleotides
The 4 macomolecules are carbohydrates, lipids,proteins, and nucleic acids. Their monomers are: Carbohydrates- Simple sugar Lipids-Fatty Acid Protein-Amino Acids Nucleic Acid-Nucleotide
The single units of polymers such as proteins, starch and DNA are called monomers.
A polymer is a large molecule made up of repeated subunits called monomers. Nucleic acids are polymers that are made up of monomers called nucleotides. Protein is a polymer made of monomers called amino acids.