Nucleic Acids
Nucleic acids are polymers. They are made of monomers Nucleotides.
Nucleic Acids are polymers of nucleotides with very specific functions in cells.
Amino-acid based polymers such as proteins.
No. A nucleic acid is a subunit of a [the] polymer.
DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) and RNA (ribonucleic acid) are both polymers, with repeating units (monomers) of nucleotides, which are made up of: - a nitrogenous base - a 5-carbon sugar (deoxyribose or ribose) - a phosphate group
which macromolecules are polymers made of nucleotides
amino acids when joined by peptide bonds gives rise to a very essential macromolecule called PROTIENS .
True
The answer is polymer. Could also be referring to Macromolecule
No, proteins are polymers of amino acids. DNA and RNA are polymers of nucleotides.
monomers,polymers=nucleotides
nucleic acids (DNA and RNA)
did you mean a macromolecule? it's made up of polymers , basically a giant molecule
Large polymers are often called macromolecules.
Nucleic acids are polymers. They are made of monomers Nucleotides.
Individual nucleotide monomers (single units) are linked together to form polymers, or long chains. so yes nucleotides do form polymers
Nucleic acids are polymers. They are made of monomers Nucleotides.