Nucleic Acids
Nucleic acids are polymers made up of monomeric units called nucleotides. Each nucleotide consists of a phosphate group, a sugar molecule, and a nitrogenous base. Multiple nucleotides linked together form a nucleic acid chain, which can be either DNA or RNA.
Yes, nucleic acids are polymers made up of repeating units called nucleotides. RNA and DNA are examples of nucleic acids that contain long chains of nucleotide monomers.
Nucleic Acids are polymers of nucleotides with very specific functions in cells.
Nucleic acid, which contains a pentose (either deoxyribose or ribose), phosphate group, and a nitrogen base (adenine, cytosine, guanine, and thymine/uracil). In addition, there is a covalent bond between the phosphate group and the pentose, and a hydrogen bond between the complementary bases.
Amino-acid based polymers such as proteins.
amino acids when joined by peptide bonds gives rise to a very essential macromolecule called PROTIENS .
True
No, proteins are polymers of amino acids. DNA and RNA are polymers of nucleotides.
The answer is polymer. Could also be referring to Macromolecule
did you mean a macromolecule? it's made up of polymers , basically a giant molecule
nucleic acids (DNA and RNA)
Large polymers are often called macromolecules.
The trait of an organism is coded for by genes, which are segments of DNA. These genes encode for specific proteins or traits, not polymers. Polymers are large molecules made up of repeating subunits, such as nucleotides in DNA or amino acids in proteins.
monomers,polymers=nucleotides
which macromolecules are polymers made of nucleotides
Molecules consisting of chains of repeating units are called polymers. Polymers are made up of smaller molecules that join to form these larger molecules. Examples of polymers include starch and nylon.
our genes code for this type of macromolecule?