Triglycerides, Phospholipids and Steroinds.
They are the lipids. It has two monomer types.
Lipids. Fats. An ester formed from one molecule of glycerol and three fatty acid molecules that could be of varying types.
Lipids includes those organic compounds which are insoluble in water. - Fats and fatty acids - oils - triglycerides - phospholipids - steroids - waxes - fat-soluble vitamins, etc. They can either be saturated or unsaturated. They have a large variety of structures and also, functions which includes - cellular/intracellular membrane - energy storage - cellular messengers - basis for sex hormones amongst other vital nutritional biological functions. For more info see the related links.
False. Glycerol is not a macromolecule itself, but a component of lipids. The four major types of macromolecules are proteins, carbohydrates, lipids, and nucleic acids.
They are the lipids. They are the monomers of lipids
Fats, oils, and waxes are the three types of lipids.
Triglycerides, Phospholipids and Steroinds.
The three of types of Lipids are: 1. True Fats 2. Phospholipids 3. Steroids
"Lipids" is a very broad category of compounds which can contain far more than three different elements.
triglycerides, phospholipids, and sterols
Monounsaturated fats, polysaturated fats, and saturated fats.
proteins carbs and lipids
The three main types of lipids are triglycerides, phospholipids, and sterols. Triglycerides are the most common form of dietary fat and function as a major energy source. Phospholipids are important components of cell membranes. Sterols, such as cholesterol, play roles in cell structure and as precursors for hormones.
They are the lipids. It has two monomer types.
YES!There are three types of Lipids in Cell Membrane.CholesterolsPhospholipdsGlycolipidsThere's quite a lot on the subject, check references, I've stuck in a link to the Wikipedia "Cell Membrane" page, search for Lipids, there's an entire section dedicated to them!
There are six types of lipids: Fatty Acids Unsaturated Saturated Monosaturated Polysaturated Triglycerides
See the related link below to graphics illustrating the structure of phospholipids.