glucose is the simplest carbohydrate
Monosaccharides are small units of carbohydrates.
Proteins and lipids are both biological macromolecules, which means they are made up of monomers (indiviudal units) to form polymers (many units). They are both formed by dehydration synthesis and broken apart by hydrolysis. In addition, their monomers can both be used as alternate forms to carbohydrates in the metabiolic pathway of cellular respiration.
They are three: carbohydrates, lipids and -in a pinch- proteins. Each of these are also used for biochemical building blocks. All three, to be used as fuel, need to be first converted into -CH2- units. All three also perform structural roles: Carbohydrates {too numerous to list}, Lipids are primarily used for Cell membranes while Proteins are ubiquitous.
The smallest units of organic compounds. Important examples of these molecules are based on chains of carbon atoms and come in four major categories: proteins, carbohydrates, lipids, and nucleic acids (DNA and RNA).
Yes. Carbohydrates and Proteins are build upi from their basic building blocks. In case of carbohydrates, the building blocks are sugar units and proteins are made up of amino acids.
Large molecules that contain carbon and are held together by covalent. They are the structural units of glycogen.
Large molecules that contain carbon and are held together by covalent. They are the structural units of glycogen.
Lipids, carbohydrates, proteins, and Nucleic Acids
No. Amino acids are the building blocks of proteins. Carbohydrates contain simple sugars (monosaccharides) and polymers of sugars (disaccharides and polysaccharides).
Glucose. Starch is a polymer made of glucose monomers.
That are the lipids. They have fatty acids and glucerols
The difference between lipids and other biomolecules is in their chemical properties. Lipids include different types of molecules like fats, steroids, oils, and waxes. but lipids do not form big polymers like other biomolecules do. Examples of other biomolecules are protein and nucleic acid.