An amylose is the soluble form of starch which is a linear polymer of glucose.
Amino acids are monomers which join together with peptide bonds to form a polymer themselves (a protein). Polymers containing repeating functional units, which is not true of an amino acid (NH2CH(R)COOH) but is true when these join up.
Yes, amylose is a (bio)polymer. It is a linear polysaccharide with alpha-D-glucose as the repeating unit.
No, an amino acid is a monomer. A polymer made of amino acids is called a polypeptide or a protein.
No , It's A Polysaccharides
It is not a straight chain.
hydrophilic
Yes it is
the answer is an amino acid
The monomers of proteins are known as amino acids....A further explanation:Do not confuse amino acids with nucleic acids. Nucleic acids are DNA and RNA and are another one of the BIG 4 macromolecules that are needed to survive.The 4 are:Carbohydrates (monomer: monosaccaride)Proteins (monomer: amino acids)Lipids (monomer: fatty acids)Nucleic Acids (monomer: nucleotides)
Polymer made up of chains of amino acids, also called a polypeptide?
Proteins are formed by step-growth polymerization. This happens in the ribosomes.
proline is not an amino acid it is an imino acid
no
the answer is an amino acid
Protein.
Enzymes are a type of protein, which are amino acid polymers.
Yes, protein is polymer of amino acids.
Yes, protein is polymer of amino acids.
Pectinase is an amino acid polymer, aka a protein.
Amino acids ARE monomers- of Proteins: a polymer. Elements C,H,O,N and sometimes s and p make it up..
No. Cellulose and glucose. Protein is the polymer and amino acid is the monomer.
amino acid and starch
an amino acid is a monomer.. it joins together to form a dipeptide.. which joins together to form a polypeptide polypeptide - otherwise known as a polymer
The monomer is the individual amino acid following the amino acid assignation (NH2CHCOOHR) where the R group determines which amino acid it is - and is the variable unit.