Amino acids make up protein and fat serves as our "second storage unit" for energy (the first being glycogen, made from glucose).
If your cells do not have enough amino acids, the amino acids from the proteins you eat are shipped to your cells so that your cells can make the proteins they need. If your cells have plenty of amino acids, the amino acids from the proteins you eat are converted into carbohydrates or fats.
No
Fat
Amino Acids
They are the amino acids. They are the monomers
amino acids :)
If your cells do not have enough amino acids, the amino acids from the proteins you eat are shipped to your cells so that your cells can make the proteins they need. If your cells have plenty of amino acids, the amino acids from the proteins you eat are converted into carbohydrates or fats.
No
Amino Acids
Fat
Amino Acids
fat catabolism
the body converts amino acid residues to glycogen or fat
The monomers of proteins are amino acids.
They are the amino acids. They are the monomers
fat gives you energy and certain amino acids needed for your body to operate
Amino acids held together by peptide bonds.