Your question is ambiguous - the previous answer applies if your question was "Which structures do proteins produce?"
However, if your question was actually "Which cellular structure produces proteins?", then you are looking for the ribosome. This is a huge molecular complex which is itself made of RNA and proteins. Ribosomes float around in the cytoplasm, but many of them are also attached to the rough endoplasmatic reticulum.
Ribosomes are the structures that manufacture proteins. This process is called protein synthesis where it synthesis proteins from amino acids using tRNA and the codes of mRNA. Prokaryote and eukaryote have different ribosomal structures.
Proteins are produced as polypeptides which can be called as primary structure. They come close to make secondary structure elements such as alpha helices and beta sheets, after which the 3D structure was made when distinct domain are made and the molecule is energetically stabilized.
Ribosomes
Ribosomes
ribosome
Prostate
proteins. But the type of amino acid obviously depends on the proteins structure. Amino acids are also produced from urea metabolism
The have differentiated so that each only produces certain kinds of proteins.The types of proteins a cell produces determines its function. From structure comes function.
yes and no the nucleolus makes the ribosome that make most of the protien inside the cell
Proteomics
Prostate
proteins
proteins. But the type of amino acid obviously depends on the proteins structure. Amino acids are also produced from urea metabolism
All cell types produce proteins. Proteins do most of the work in cells and are required for the structure, function, and regulation of the bodyâ??s tissues and organs.
All proteins have structure.
In short RIBOSOMES help connect the amino-acids in cells to create PROTEINS in the Animals Cell structure.
Proteins are assembled on the ribosomes.
The have differentiated so that each only produces certain kinds of proteins.The types of proteins a cell produces determines its function. From structure comes function.
Ribosomes produce the proteins needed in a cell
No. Proteins start out as a Primary structure, which is just the linear form and sequence of amino acids. The proteins then start forming alpha helices and/or Beta sheets depending on the properties of the amino acids. This is their Secondary structure The proteins then fold completely into tertiary structure. Here, we have a lot of hydrogen bonding and hydrophobic interactions within the protein between the helices and beta sheets. Many proteins are fully functional in their tertiary structure and don't have any reason for forming into a quaternary structure. In the quaternary structure, we usually see an interaction between 2 or more polypeptides or proteins. An example would be 2 proteins in their tertiary structure binding together to become a functional dimer. If 3 proteins were interacting it would form a trimer. Several proteins are functional only in a quaternary structure while several more proteins are just fine in their tertiary structure and therefore do not have a quaternary structure.
produces proteins
mitochondria ;)