ATP is a nucleoside triphosphate and used in cells as a coenzyme that transfers energy within the cell. It is related to one of the bases and DNA and used over again. By ATPase do you mean ATP synthase, if so this is an enzyme that speeds up the production of making ATP from ADP + P.
It's not a macromolecule, it is a nucleotide because it has a nucleobase bound to ribose and phosphate groups. A nucleotide is a monomer that makes up the polymers in the class of macromolecules called "nucleic acids"
ATP does not have a polymer but in fact itself is a nucleotide because of its ribose and nucleic shape
It is categorized as a ribonucleotide triphosphate.
ATP is a nucleotide
ATP is not a polymer.
No. It is not.
A Nucleotide
monoamines
It is a carbohydrate, It is apolysaccharide
That is the lipids. Second one is carbohydrates
Proteins, carbohydrates, and fats
The blue ones!
Nucleic acid
It is a carbohydrate, It is apolysaccharide
monoamines
ATP. Adenosine Triphosphate.
That is the lipids. Second one is carbohydrates
Proteins, carbohydrates, and fats
The blue ones!
vits
That would be the 'mitochondria'...
The category of organic molecules that the term -saccharide refers to is carbohydrate. A carbohydrate is one of the macromolecules found in the body.
In the mitochondria. It's the "powerhouse" of the cell.
Nucleotide because it also contains a phosphate group as well as a nitrogenous base.