Biology, asked by ajaytak5495, 1 year ago

Nucleic acids are made of which monomers?

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
2

\mathbb{\huge{\pink{ANSWER}}}

All nucleic acids are made up of the same building blocks (monomers). Chemists call the monomers "nucleotides." The five pieces are uracil, cytosine, thymine, adenine, and guanine. No matter what science class you are in, you will always hear about ATCG when looking at DNA.

\mathbb{\huge{\blue{HOPE.IT.HELPS}}}

Answered by Anonymous
1
❤❤Høla mate ❤❤


✒Answere♦


✨All nucleic acids are made up of the same building blocks (monomers). Chemists call the monomers "nucleotides." The five pieces are uracil, cytosine, thymine, adenine, and guanine. No matter what science class you are in, you will always hear about ATCG when looking at DNA.✨

✌Høpe it's help you✌
Similar questions