Yes. Any Glycosaminoglycan consists of repeating units of hexose (six-carbon sugar) or a hexuronic acid, linked to a hexosamine (six-carbon sugar containing nitrogen).
Yes, soil does contain nitrogen.
Glycosaminoglycans are negatively charged due to the presence of sulfate and carboxyl groups in their structure. These groups can ionize in aqueous solutions, contributing to the overall negative charge of glycosaminoglycans.
some plants have bacteria in their roots which contain nitrogen when plants want nitrogen they exchange their food made them with nitrogen. Example: pea plants contain bacteria called rhizobium which contains nitrogen
Nitrogen is primarily found in proteins, which are made up of amino acids that contain nitrogen. Carbohydrates and lipids typically do not contain nitrogen in their structure.
No, glycogen is a complex carbohydrate composed of glucose molecules linked together. It does not contain nitrogen.
Nitrogen doesn't contain air, but the air contains Nitrogen.
Yes, soil does contain nitrogen.
No, snow does not contain nitrogen. Snow is made up of frozen water vapor and does not typically contain nitrogen.
Yes. All living things contain nitrogen.
Yes, fish fertilizer does contain nitrogen.
Proteins contain nitrogen, which is not present in carbohydrates.
Protiens contain nitrogen
No. Carbon and nitrogen are both elements. They contain only themselves.
Glycosaminoglycans are negatively charged due to the presence of sulfate and carboxyl groups in their structure. These groups can ionize in aqueous solutions, contributing to the overall negative charge of glycosaminoglycans.
There are many compounds that don't contain nitrogen: CO2, NaCl, H2O, C6H6, CuCl2...
Lipids haven't nitrogen.
Amines contain nitrogen.