no
no
No; glycine: An amino acid found in sugar cane. It's found in it, but not considered sugar.
Monosaccharide
Monosaccharide
amino acids -proteins
Yep, yep.
pattern of sugar
sugar phosphate, amino acid and nitrogenous base
determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences?
No, definitely not.An amino acid is a building block, a constituent, the base unit of polypeptides and thus of proteins. There are 20 different amino acids (valine, lysine, aspartate, glutamate, glycine, tryptophan, phenylalanine and so on). An amino acid has a central carbon group, attached to which are an amine group (NH2), a carboxylic acid group (COOH), a hydrogen and an R group. The R groups is the only part that differs from amino acid to amino acid and thus defines the amino acid.A nucleic acid is a genetic molecule. DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) and RNA (ribonucleic acid) are nucleic acids. They are polynucleotides, made up of a phosphate-sugar backbone and nitrogenous bases of which there are four types: adenine, thymine (uracil in RNA), cytosine and guanine. A single nucleotide is a single 'unit' such as this: a phosphate, sugar and base combination. DNA's sugar is deoxyribose, RNA's sugar is ribose.
An aminosaccharide is a type of molecule that contains both amino and saccharide (sugar) groups. It is made up of a sugar molecule with one or more amino acid groups attached to it. A common example of an aminosaccharide is glucosamine, which is an important component of cartilage in the body.
Amino acids may be broken down by a process called deamination. This results in formation of NH2 and a carboxlic acd .This acid may be converted into sugar or fatty acid or may be used in respiration .