no. they are carbohydrates
R. T. Coutts has written: 'Polysaccharides, peptides and proteins' -- subject(s): Peptides, Proteins, Polysaccharides
Disaccharides, monosaccharides, and polysaccharides are all types of carbohydrates consisting of sugar molecules. Peptides, on the other hand, are composed of amino acids and are not related to the other three terms in this context.
It is a strong structure (becuase it is a net of covalently bonded polysaccharides and peptides) which stops the cell it encloses from expanding too much, thus stopping it exploding.
Yes, bacterial cells typically have an outer cell wall made up of peptidoglycan, a combination of polysaccharides and peptides. This cell wall structure helps provide support and protection to the bacterial cell.
No. Polysaccharides are carbohydrates.
The subunits of Polysaccharides are monosaccharides
they are polysaccharides they are polysaccharides they are polysaccharides
they are polysaccharides they are polysaccharides they are polysaccharides
Proteins are made up of one or more peptides.
Starch and Cellulose are both polysaccharides
Yes, polysaccharides are complex carbohydrates.
No. Peptides are strings of amino acids. These proteins (peptides) are folded and coiled into polypeptides.