Proteinoid microspheres (or just a microsphere if you were going for a general answer)
No, it is one molecule.However some large organic molecules (i.e. polymers) are formed from small organic molecules (i.e. monomers) that bond together into long chains, forming one new large molecule. The small molecules no longer exist as individual molecules after bonding into the large molecule.
condensation
Large carbohydrates are broken down by hydrolysis, or the addition of water molecules.
Lime Stone(Calcium Carbonate)
Enzymes
No, it is one molecule.However some large organic molecules (i.e. polymers) are formed from small organic molecules (i.e. monomers) that bond together into long chains, forming one new large molecule. The small molecules no longer exist as individual molecules after bonding into the large molecule.
A very large organic compound made up of chains of smaller molecules is a polymer. Polymers are macromolecules formed by repeating units of smaller molecules called monomers. Examples of polymers include proteins, DNA, and synthetic plastics.
The class of large organic molecules that include polymers is proteins, nucleic acids, and carbohydrates. Lipids are the fourth major class of large organic molecules, but they are not polymers.
Lipids are fats, or to be technical, they are non-polar organic molecules. They do form large molecules but they do not polymerize.
carbohydrateslipidsproteinsnucleic acids
bones
polymers
Their functional groups.
Sometimes
Large organic molecules (macromolecules) are generally formed by condensation reactions between smaller molecules.Condensation means that a small molecule is formed from the atoms removed during the reaction. In cells, the small molecule is water, so the type of condensation reaction is dehydration.Examples:glucose + (chain of n glucose residues) forms chain of n + 1 residues + wateramino acid + (chain of n amino acid residues) forms chain of n + 1 residues + water
The covalent bond.
Oxygen