as it is a tongue twister it will take an average person about 15-20 seconds to say 100 letters. Using this infomation, I worked out it would take roughly 22 hours to say. Start at midnight and you should be done by 10pm the next day!
The full name of the protein titin is spelled "connectin." Titin, also known as connectin, is a giant protein that plays a critical role in muscle structure and function. Its full name, connectin, reflects its function in connecting the Z line to the M line in the sarcomere of muscle cells.
The letters b, f, j, k, q, w, x, and z are not found in the full chemical name of Titin.
I did a page search for the letter "e" while on a website that lists the entire name and my browser indicated that there were 9230 instances of the character out of about 180,000 characters total.
Cero times. No z in the chemical name of Titin.
The protein is "titin" while the moon or deities is "titan". See related question below to see the full chemical name of the protein.
It is the a small part of the over 189.000 letter word which is actually the full chemical name for the largest protein titin.
Oh, dude, the scientific name for titin is like super long and fancy. It's called "connectin" or "ruler protein" in the scientific world, but if you wanna get all formal, it's officially known as "TTN." So, yeah, that's the deal with titin, man. Like, it's a big deal in muscles and stuff.
Titin is the largest known protein with a length of 34,350 amino acids. Regular proteins are relatively big molecules, and titin happens to be the largest with a chemical formula of C132983H211861N36149O40883S693 The "chemical name" of a protein is basically a listing of the amino acids it contains in order: Glycyltryptophanylalanine would be a compound made of the amino acids glycine, tryptophan, and alanine. If there are more than a few amino acids the names get very long, so proteins are often given (fairly) short names as well, often ones that describe what they do or where they're found. "Titin" is one example; "hemoglobin" and "superoxide dismutase" are a couple of others. There's also a shorthand way of specifying the exact sequence of amino acids in a protein that uses a three letter abbreviation ("GLY" instead of "glycyl") and an even shorter way that uses single letter abbreviations ("W" instead of tryptophanyl (no, it doesn't make sense to me either)).
Antidisestablishmentarianism But there's also a word that has 100,000+ letters in it! It's technically not a word, it's the full name of the drug "Titin".
oofboybordee
As long as it takes to read the chemical name for titin.
The longest word in the solar system is "methionylthreonylthreonylglutaminylarginyl isoleucine," which is the chemical name for titin, the largest known protein. Titin is found in muscle tissues and is responsible for muscle contraction and elasticity. Its chemical name consists of 189,819 letters and can take over three hours to pronounce in its entirety.