There are 21 amino acids:
The subunits that make up proteins in most living things are twenty different amino acids. Google amino acid at wiki.
The proteins in living things are traditionally said to be composed of 20 amino acids. However, scientist have recently discovered a 21st one, Selenocysteine.
The monomers of proteins are amino acids.
Proteins are made up of (long strings of) amino acids.Amino acids are the building blocks of proteins. There are around 20 amino acids in total. By joining together they form long chain proteins.
They make polypeptides chains. A chain made of over 100 amino acids is often called a protein
To make proteins.
There are 20 amino acids used to make proteins by all living things. There are a few additional amino acids that some archaebacteria use to make proteins that are not used by other living things. There are many more synthetic amino acids that can be made, but while synthetic proteins can be made with them no living thing uses these additional amino acids.
amino acid
There are 20 different amino acids that make up all the proteins found in living things.
The subunits that make up proteins in most living things are twenty different amino acids. Google amino acid at wiki.
there are only twenty different amino acid
There is really no one amino acid in plants. There are about 20 main amino acids that make up the thousands of proteins that keeps living things alive.
The proteins in living things are traditionally said to be composed of 20 amino acids. However, scientist have recently discovered a 21st one, Selenocysteine.
All living things use 20 amino acids to make proteins.
Found in two of the amino acids that make up many proteins
Proteins are polymers of amino acid monomers. Proteins are the chemical "workhorses" and "structural building blocks" of living things. We need to eat foods containing proteins so that we can take them apart to their component amino acids, then later reassemble those amino acids to make our own proteins as we lack the ability to synthesize amino acids ourselves.
No. but amino acids are the building blocks of protein