no, lipid-anchor membrane protein are found within the lipid-bilyer and are covalently bonded, but paripheral membrane proteins and found on the out side of the membrane , either on the extracellular or the cytoplasm side ,and they bonded my hydrogen bond.
No, they are called phospholipids because they are made of lipids and phosphate group. Most phospholipids contain a diglyceride, a phosphate group, and a simple organic molecule such as choline.
Proteins can have the same number of amino acids (and therefore same mass) yet be different proteins due to the different order of amino acids.
No: peripheral vision is the vision you are not really aware of, that is the bits around the edges of your vision. Binocular vision is using two eyes together to focus on an object in front of you.
Proteins are far larger than atoms. There are no proteins small enough to fit inside an atom.
I believe it performs the same function as a cell.
the basic type of membrane according to cell biology is a lipid bilayer with proteins embedded in it. most membranes are made this way except for difference in some biomolecules but the basic structure is the same that is a lipid bilayer with proteins embedded in it
BF3 is a common boron compound and is neither a fat or a lipid which are the same thing
The nucleus has the same sort of boundary as the cell itself has. That is a lipid bilayer.
No, they are called phospholipids because they are made of lipids and phosphate group. Most phospholipids contain a diglyceride, a phosphate group, and a simple organic molecule such as choline.
yes
Proteins can have the same number of amino acids (and therefore same mass) yet be different proteins due to the different order of amino acids.
Complex proteins are made the same way as regular proteins; through translation.
No. An amino acid is the monomer or building block of a protein. Fat is the "street term" for lipid, so essentially fat and lipid are synonyms. Amino acid and protein are not the same substance because many amino acids plus extensive folding, coiling, pleating, or looping create polypeptides, which then join together as a functional protein.
No. A gerbil's eyes are anchored in place by the same kind of muscles we have.
No. These are two distinctly different conditions.
Enzymes are proteins; so technically they are the same size.
The peripheral nervous system is the same as the sensory nerves. These are the nerves which are responsible for the various senses.