All the macromolecules in the human body are basically Carbon covalently bonded to other elements- mostly Hydrogen, Oxygen and other carbon atoms. There are other elements, but they don't appear in all of the body's macromolecules.
It is Carbon.
There are three elements. They are C, H, and O.
There are three elements. They are C , H, and O
There are 2 elements. They are C and H
Carbon
Carbon.
carbon
CARBON APEXXXX
macromolecules
Macromolecules are large molecules. Macromolecules are found in the proteins, carbohydrates, nucleic acid, and lipids in the body. Macromolecules are essential to the structure and function of a cell.
the appendix is located at the end of the large intestine... on the lower right part of your body
enzymes are macromolecules, therefore they are larger than single or double bonded atoms. They are on the large end in an organism, but not as big as an organelle.
In most cases of digesting macromolecules, the process of degrading a large molecule, or breaking the bonds, is in fact what releases the energy. The quick easy energy for a cell is from the break down of glucose via cellular respiration. The cell uses the energy of the bonds holding glucose together to produce ATP, ATP then serves as an energy currency for cells. I would recommend looking at a diagram for the electron transport chain, it explains the mechanism by which ATP is formed, ATP is then used for energy. A simpler answer would be that the macromolecules are too large to pass through the cell membranes.
carbon
There are three elements. They are C,H and O
carbon
Carbon and/or hydrogen.
Large polymers are often called macromolecules.
Macromolecules
macromolecules.
macromolecules
polysaccharies
deoxyribonucleic acid
Macromolecules are large molecules. Macromolecules are found in the proteins, carbohydrates, nucleic acid, and lipids in the body. Macromolecules are essential to the structure and function of a cell.
The general term for very large molecules is "macromolecules". There are special terms for different specific types of macromolecules, like "polymers" or "proteins", and most people studying them specialize in one or another specific type.