primary structure
RNA is the most amino acids.
The function of a protein depends on its shape.
Amino acids are fundamental in your DNA. You need them to make DNA. You need them to be alive. Amino acids bind together in a special combination that your body needs to make more.
Amino acids---->peptide---->polypeptide--->protein.
The number of amino acids/protein differ largely and is characteristic for each protein separately. A protein is composed of amino acids, and the function of the protein depends of the type and order of the amino acids. Because amino acids can be arranged in many different combinations, it's possible for your body to make thousands of different kinds of protein from just the same 20 amino acids.The simplest protein of life, ribonuclease, contains 124 amino acids. The "average" protein, though, contains several thousand amino acids, but those several thousand comprised only about 20 different kinds of amino acids.
The order of amino acids in a protein determines its structure and function.
The order of amino acids can affect the protein's shape.
the order of its amino acids
RNA is the most amino acids.
The function of a protein depends on its shape.
Amino acids are fundamental in your DNA. You need them to make DNA. You need them to be alive. Amino acids bind together in a special combination that your body needs to make more.
Amino acids---->peptide---->polypeptide--->protein.
The order of bases in DNA is a code. Proteins are made of substances called, " Amino acids". A long strand of amino acids forms a protein.
The number of amino acids/protein differ largely and is characteristic for each protein separately. A protein is composed of amino acids, and the function of the protein depends of the type and order of the amino acids. Because amino acids can be arranged in many different combinations, it's possible for your body to make thousands of different kinds of protein from just the same 20 amino acids.The simplest protein of life, ribonuclease, contains 124 amino acids. The "average" protein, though, contains several thousand amino acids, but those several thousand comprised only about 20 different kinds of amino acids.
Like most of the other biological macromolecules, proteins are formed from the linkage of monomers called amino acids.
Amino acids. There are twenty different amino acids that nature uses routinely to produce proteins. Nature has a very specific order for incorporating these amino acids to produce any specific protein. This order is coded by the genes of the organism and in an elaborate way, the code is interpreted into the order of amino acid incorporation during protein synthesis.
The order of amino acids can affect the protein's shape.