Biology, asked by alliyahmontoya85, 4 months ago

List the monomers and polymers of carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer:

Hope this helps you

Explanation:

Monomers are the building blocks of the four basic macromolecules of life- monosaccharides are the monomers of carbohydrates, amino acids are the monomers of proteins, glycerol/fatty acids are the monomers of lipids, and nucleotides are the monomers of DNA.

Answered by innocentmunda07
2

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Explanation:

Monomer of carbohydrates= monosaccharides

Polymer= (depends) disaccharide, oligosaccharide, polysaccharide

Carbohydrates are one of the four basic macromolecules of life. They are a polymer made up of monomers called monosaccharides. These building blocks are simple sugars, e.g., glucose and fructose.

Two monosaccharides connected together makes a disaccharide. For example, in sucrose (table sugar), a glucose and fructose link together.

Lipids -

polymers called diglycerides, triglycerides; monomers are glycerol and fatty acids. Proteins - polymers are known as polypeptides; monomers are amino acids. Nucleic Acids - polymers are DNA and RNA; monomers are nucleotides, which are in turn consist of a nitrogenous base, pentose sugar, and phosphate group.

Proteins -

polymers are known as polypeptides; monomers are amino acids. Nucleic Acids - polymers are DNA and RNA; monomers are nucleotides, which are in turn consist of a nitrogenous base, pentose sugar, and phosphate group.

Nucleic Acids -

polymers are DNA and RNA; monomers are nucleotides, which are in turn consist of a nitrogenous base, pentose sugar, and phosphate group. Carbohydrates - polymers are polysaccharides and disaccharides*; monomers are monosaccharides (simple sugars)

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