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| The word monomer is derived from the greek "mono" meaning one and "meros" meaning part. A monomer is an [[Atom|atom]] or [[Molecule|molecule]] which acts as a building block which may react chemically with other molecules of the same type (other monomers) in order to form longer chain molecules ([[Polymer|polymers]]).
| | See [[Monomer|Monomer]] |
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| A common natural example of a monomer is [[Glucose|glucose]] which forms [[Glycosidic bond|glycosidic bonds]]. The resulting polymers are [[Cellulose|cellulose]] or [[Starch|starch]].
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| It should be noted that polymers of smaller [[Molecular weight|molecular weights]] can be referred to as dimers (2 sub-units), trimers (3 sub-units) etc.
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| <br>
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| References:
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| Alberts ''et al. ''Molecular Biology of the Cell (5th Edition), 2008
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Latest revision as of 07:41, 18 October 2017