a very hard question
Yes, a polypeptide is a sequence of amino acids.
Amino acids combine much like links in a chain to form proteins.
amino acids amino acids
No it's a protein. In a way you could see it as a chain of amino acids that is folded in a way that makes it biochemically useful in the body.
amino acids make proteins and an enzyme is a protein so......
A polypeptide chain, or also known as a string of amino acids, is made by protein synthesis through transcription and translation of RNA.
The official definition of a polypeptide is a linear organic polymer consisting of a large number of amino-acid residues bonded together in a chain, forming part of (or the whole of) a protein molecule. (a string of amino acids)
Amino acid monomers make up a polypeptide chain which folds into it's particular shape, based on amino acid sequences, to make a protein
amino acids
The remainder group or R Group. An amino acid is constituted by the amine group, the carboxylic acid group, and the side chain (AKA Remainder group). It's the chemistry of the side chain that makes an amino acid unique from the other amino acids.
It creates amino acids which collects mrkhthen the amino acids brake and makes proteins
Amino acids make up proteins. Protein molecules are made of a long chain of three amino acids each linked to its neighbor through a covalent bond. Amino acids are compounds containing an amino group and a carboxylic acid group.