Biology, asked by arpanprajapati22, 3 months ago

the bacterial cell wall is formed of​

Answers

Answered by aisha006
1

Explanation:

peptidoglycan

The bacterial cell wall is composed mostly of peptidoglycan (or murein), a three-dimensional mesh which consists of polymerized chains of repeating disaccharide subunits (N-acetylglucosamine (NAG) and N-acetylmuramic acids (NAM)) cross-linked by stem pentapeptides.

Answered by aarti225566
3

Answer:

peptidoglycan

Explanation:

The bacterial cell wall is composed mostly of peptidoglycan (or murein), a three-dimensional mesh which consists of polymerized chains of repeating disaccharide subunits (N-acetylglucosamine (NAG) and N-acetylmuramic acids (NAM)) cross-linked by stem pentapeptides.

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