For the Dna [sugar-phosphate] backbone there are two types of monomers - the ribose [5 carbon] sugar and the [PO4 minus] phosphate moiety. The Four Handshake Bases that form 'the rungs of the Dna Ladder' are the nucleotide base monomers. Their Names are the pairs Adenine with Guanine and the pairs Cytosine with Thymine.
An antibody molecule is composed of four monomers: two heavy chains and two light chains. These monomers are held together by disulfide bonds to form the Y-shaped structure of an antibody.
The monomers of nucleic acids are called nucleotides. There are only two types of nucleic acid: RNA and DNA. Both nucleotides contain a ribose sugar, a phosphate, and a nitrogenous base.
The monomers of all four macromolecules are: Carbohydrates: Monosaccharides Proteins: Amino acids Lipids: Fatty acids and glycerol Nucleic acids: Nucleotides
Proteins - composed of amino acid monomers. Nucleic acids (DNA and RNA) - composed of nucleotide monomers. Carbohydrates - composed of simple sugar (monosaccharide) monomers. Lipids - composed of fatty acid and glycerol monomers.
The four different types of monomers consist of: 1. Proteins 2. Carbohydrates 3. lipids 4. nucleic acids
The four different types of monomers consist of: 1. Proteins 2. Carbohydrates 3. lipids 4. nucleic acids
They can be arranged in different ways - for example, in a different order, or even a straight chain vs. forked (I am not quite sure whether this is possible with sugar monomers).
fastball curveball changeup slider are the four most common. there are different variations of each pitch but those are the basic names.
For the Dna [sugar-phosphate] backbone there are two types of monomers - the ribose [5 carbon] sugar and the [PO4 minus] phosphate moiety. The Four Handshake Bases that form 'the rungs of the Dna Ladder' are the nucleotide base monomers. Their Names are the pairs Adenine with Guanine and the pairs Cytosine with Thymine.
There are no specific names for such a shape.
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An antibody molecule is composed of four monomers: two heavy chains and two light chains. These monomers are held together by disulfide bonds to form the Y-shaped structure of an antibody.
The monomers of nucleic acids are called nucleotides. There are only two types of nucleic acid: RNA and DNA. Both nucleotides contain a ribose sugar, a phosphate, and a nitrogenous base.
They were made from 1959 to 1979 in four different variations.
The structural difference could arise from the specific arrangement of glucose and galactose monomers within each oligosaccharide. For example, in one oligosaccharide, the glucose monomers could be linked to each other first, followed by the two galactose monomers. In the other oligosaccharide, the galactose monomers could be linked first, followed by the two glucose monomers. This difference in monomer arrangement leads to distinct chemical properties and biological functions in the oligosaccharides.
short, long, flat and irregular