Condensation(removal of a water molecule) links amino acids together to form chains called polypeptides.
Protein synthesis possibly? Technically what forms the actual bond between the amino acids is dehydration, where an enzyme binds to the amino acids, and removes any H2O, and thus a bond is formed.
Amino acids are linked together to make proteins. The process of linking amino acids together is called protein synthesis or translation, which occurs in ribosomes within cells. A specific sequence of amino acids determines the structure and function of the protein being produced.
No, protein molecules do not link up to make amino acids. Instead, amino acids are the building blocks of proteins; they are linked together in specific sequences through peptide bonds to form proteins. The process of protein synthesis involves translating the genetic code to assemble amino acids into polypeptide chains, which then fold into functional proteins.
When amino acids are incorporated into a protein, it is called translation. During translation, messenger RNA (mRNA) is read by ribosomes, which assemble amino acids into a specific sequence based on the instructions encoded in the mRNA. This process results in the formation of a protein with a specific sequence of amino acids.
The process that uses mRNA and amino acids to make proteins is called translation. During translation, ribosomes read the sequence of the mRNA, and transfer RNA (tRNA) molecules bring the corresponding amino acids to the ribosome. The ribosome then links these amino acids together in the order specified by the mRNA sequence, forming a polypeptide chain that folds into a functional protein.
A protein is made up of chains of amino acids, which are the building blocks of proteins. Fatty acids are the building blocks of lipids, while peptides are made up of chains of amino acids but are shorter than proteins. Carboxylic acids are organic compounds that contain a carboxyl group.
The process of converting mRNA into a sequence of amino acids is called translation. During translation, mRNA is read by ribosomes to produce a specific sequence of amino acids according to the genetic code. This sequence of amino acids then folds into a protein with a specific function.
Amino acids make up proteins.
Amino acids are the subunits that make up proteins.
Amino acids make up proteins.
Amino acids are linked together to make proteins. The process of linking amino acids together is called protein synthesis or translation, which occurs in ribosomes within cells. A specific sequence of amino acids determines the structure and function of the protein being produced.
No, protein molecules do not link up to make amino acids. Instead, amino acids are the building blocks of proteins; they are linked together in specific sequences through peptide bonds to form proteins. The process of protein synthesis involves translating the genetic code to assemble amino acids into polypeptide chains, which then fold into functional proteins.
There are nine essential amino acids. A protein is considered to be complete if it contains all nine of these amino acids.
The number of amino acids/protein differ largely and is characteristic for each protein separately. A protein is composed of amino acids, and the function of the protein depends of the type and order of the amino acids. Because amino acids can be arranged in many different combinations, it's possible for your body to make thousands of different kinds of protein from just the same 20 amino acids.The simplest protein of life, ribonuclease, contains 124 amino acids. The "average" protein, though, contains several thousand amino acids, but those several thousand comprised only about 20 different kinds of amino acids.
Proteins are constructed from amino acids through a process called protein synthesis. During protein synthesis, amino acids are linked together in a specific sequence dictated by the genetic code encoded in DNA. This process involves transcription of DNA into messenger RNA, and then translation of mRNA into a sequence of amino acids, which ultimately folds into a functional protein.
The term "complete protein" refers to amino acids, the building blocks of protein. A protein must contain all nine of these essential amino acids in roughly equal amounts.
The way you stated your question doesn't make any sense. Proteins are a combination of "amino acids". Amino acids are monomers of proteins. There are 20 amino acids that arrange themselves differently to make a single protein.
No, they are the building blocks of protiens, or they make the proteins.