Want this question answered?
amino acid
Mainly The R Group, but also that there is also the particular positions that give the amino acid molecule its characteristic chemical properties. Another is at the -C-C-N- peptide linkage.
no part of ion is part of amino acid
Amino acids are, as the name suggests, both amines (basic) and acids (acidic, of course). They fall into the category of compounds known as zwitterions: chemicals that have an acidic part and a basic part in the same molecule.
Mainly The R Group, but also that there is also the particular positions that give the amino acid molecule its characteristic chemical properties. Another is at the -C-C-N- peptide linkage.
no amino sugars are not part of amino acid
That is transfer RNA, tRNA, a protein and metabolic RNA combination that is an important part of translation.
Polypeptide is a part of an amino acid. Check out -> Deamination.
There really isn't any difference and the terms are used essentially interchangeably, though saying "residue" implies that it's part of a larger structure (and hence is missing a few atoms compared to a complete amino acid molecule).
no
The amino group is present at one end of the amino acid and is represented by the chemical formula NH3 The region on the amino acid that contains the amino group is called the amino terminal
The "R" group