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An amino acid.

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Q: What molecule would be attached to other monomers by a peptide bond?
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What type of molecule uses peptide bonds?

amino acids use peptide bonds to fuse with other amino acids and form proteins.


What forms a peptide bonds?

A peptide bond is a covalent chemical bond formed between a molecule from a carboxyl group of one molecule or more molecule reacts with the amino group of the other molecule. This is called a dehydration synthesis reaction.


How do 2 monomers link together?

Carbohydrates is a very broard class of sugar molecules and monomers can join in many ways. 1,4- beta glycosidic bonds 1,4- alpha glycosidic bonds 1,6 glycosidic bonds 1 and 6 are refering to the carbon molecules and Beta and alpha refer to the orientation of the sugars with respect to each other. But for a simple answer they connect to each other by glycosidic bonds.


What is the difference between monomers and isomers?

Monomers and isomers are completely different. Monomers are building blocks of polymers/macromolecules. For example, amino acids are the monomers of proteins and monosaccharides are monomers of carbohydrates. Isomers, on the other hand, are molecules with the same number of atoms in a compound, but different arrangements of bonds or shapes.


Are all proteins polymers?

Proteins are polymers of amino acids. Another name for protein is polypeptide. They are made of many (poly = many) amino acids joined together by peptide bonds. (Glycerol and fatty acids are the monomers of lipids)


What molecule is responsible for relaxing the pyloric sphinctor?

Vasoactive intestinal peptide And peppermint. And a whole lot of other stuff.


What class of biological molecule contains peptide bonds between the individual monomers?

Amino acids are joined by peptide bonds. A peptide bond is a covalent bond that forms between two amino acids when the carboxyl group (COOH) of one amino acid reacts with the amino group (NH2) of the other amino acid, resulting in a C-N bond, which is a peptide bond. Click on the related link below to see an image of a peptide bond.


Combining a molecule of glucose with a molecule of fructose to make a larger molecule of sucrose is an example of?

I hope this is what you are looking for! When you combine two monomers (an individual building block, e.g. a molecule of fructose) to make a polymer (the linked chain made of the monomers) you go through a process called dehydration reaction, or dehydration synthesis. In dehydration synthesis one molecule of water is taken out from the monomers which combines them together. An unlinked monomer (e.g. the molecule of fructose and glucose) will have a hydroxyl group at one end (-OH) and a hydrogen atom at the other end (-H). When you take out the water (H20) you form a covalent bond between the end of one monomer, and the beginning of the next - linking the two monomers


Can proteins form polymers?

Yes, proteins are formed from amino acid monomers. The OH group on one end of the amino acid bonds with the hydrogen group on the other end to form a water molecule. Then the peptide bond forms (carbon-nitrogen-carbon)


A small molecule that joins with other small molecules to form a polymer?

All polymers are formed from monomers joining together.


What is the substrate for isomerase?

The substrate of dipeptides is a peptide. These peptides are small proteins comprised of short chains of amino acid monomers bonded by other peptides that occur naturally in biological organisms


What do you call two different molecules that are attached to each other?

A molecule