Yes. My big-book says "Some amino acids are neutral and polar". The others are G, S, Y, C, N, and Q (Glu).
Yes. With Serine, Threonine, Asparagine, Glutamine and Cysteine, are considered as uncharged polar side chain amino acids.
Threonine and Isoleucine
t shaped molecules are polar as they are unsymmetric due to the lone pair t shaped molecules are polar as they are unsymmetric due to the lone pair
CH2 does not exist on its own and polarity is generally only considered in respect of neutral moelcules.
A polar molecule. or perhaps a polar covalent bond.
Yes. With Serine, Threonine, Asparagine, Glutamine and Cysteine, are considered as uncharged polar side chain amino acids.
Threonine, Tyrosine, Tryptophan.
A water molecule is polar, which is why it attracts other polar molecules.
Threonine and Isoleucine
The water is a neutral substance but the molecule is polar.
t shaped molecules are polar as they are unsymmetric due to the lone pair t shaped molecules are polar as they are unsymmetric due to the lone pair
No, is a stable neutral compound with the formula C2H2.
There are 4 classes of lipids. Neutral fats, phospholipids, steroids, and eicosanoids. Phospholipids are polar.
It's not. It's neutral and slightly polar.
CH2 does not exist on its own and polarity is generally only considered in respect of neutral moelcules.
A polar molecule. or perhaps a polar covalent bond.
It makes the molecule polar