Yes, cellulose is comprised of usually a very large number of glucose molecules linked together.
No it is not. Cellulose is a structural polysaccharide of cell walls.
Yes it is. Cellulose is a homo-polysaccharide that never branches. Due to its beta 1-4 linkages and the fact that it is made only of thousands of glucose molecules.
No, it is a homopolymer because it is a long chain of just glucose residues (homo=1 type of residue)
Yes homopolymer of glucose.
yes
Amino acids---->peptide---->polypeptide--->protein.
Polypeptide is a part of an amino acid. Check out -> Deamination.
Polypeptide bonds....polypeptide bonds equal proteins ;)
What does the "one gene-one polypeptide" theory state?
a polypeptide of 10 glycine's
Alpha Glucose is a monomer of starch beta glucose is a monomer of cellulose amino acids are monomers of polypeptide
Polymer:Monomer DNA: nucleotides Starch: Glucose Cellulose: Glucose PolyPeptide: 2 or more amino acids
Yes, bacteria do have a cell wall. However, they are dissimilar from those of plant cells, as they are not made of cellulose. Instead, they have peptidoglycan, which is a network of polysaccharide molecules connected b y polypeptide crosslinks.
how are polypeptide, and aticodon related
A protein is a polypeptide.
A polypeptide.
polypeptide chain
Amino acids---->peptide---->polypeptide--->protein.
Which of the following groups of terms are all associated with lipids? monosaccharide, glucose, cellulose fats, cell membranes, storage of energy amino acids, enzyme, polypeptide bonds nucleotide, DNA, RNA
Polypeptide is a part of an amino acid. Check out -> Deamination.
a polysaccharide is the polymer of carbohydrates and a polypeptide is the polymer of a lipid.
Alanine is not a polypeptide. It's an amino acid.