No, they cut DNA.
Yes. Enzymes are made of protein basically and protein is made from many amino acids.
Enzymes are typically made up of protein molecules, which are made up of long chains of amino acids. Each specific enzyme has its unique sequence of amino acids that gives it its specific structure and function.
Protein molecules are digested by protease enzymes into one of 20 individual amino acids.
enzymes
Enzymes are proteins so they are made in the ribosomes. They are synthesized from amino acids that are coded for in the DNA.
Enzymes are a type of protein, which are amino acid polymers.
All Enzymes are basically proteins. Amino acids are building blocks of proteins. Another Answer No enzyme 'turns' a protein into multiple amino acids. What an enzyme may do is split a protein down to its substituent amino acids. (Proteins are inherently long stings of amino acids joined by peptide bonds.) The group of enzymes that split proteins (hydrolyse proteins) to their single amino acids are called proteases. Pepsin is a protease released by the stomach. Trypsin is a protease released by the pancreas.
Protein chains are broken down into amino acids by enzymes in the stomach and small intestine during the process of digestion. These enzymes break the bonds between amino acids, allowing them to be absorbed into the bloodstream.
B) Enzymes are composed of chains of amino acids and are considered to be a type of protein.
Enzymes are proteins composed of 20 different amino acids, so the number of possible combinations of amino acids in an enzyme is vast, with 20 amino acids at each position in the protein chain. The total number of potential combinations is calculated as 20 raised to the power of the number of amino acids in the enzyme.
The decomposition of a protein produces amino acids, which are the building blocks of proteins. This process is usually carried out by enzymes in the body to break down proteins into their individual amino acid components.
Enzymes are folded proteins. Proteins are made by ribosomes in the cell. To be specific, information in the nucleus (DNA) is transcripted to mRNA which leaves the nucleus to go to a ribosome to help it assemble amino acids (which are the building blocks of protein). The ribosome "reads" the information of the mRNA and make a sequence of amino acids based on that. This chain of amino acids will become folded due to interactions between between each amino acids which will ultimately become a fully functional protein. This protein may become an enzyme. All enzymes are proteins but not all proteins are enzymes.