Fatty acids are the building blocks of lipids
WHAT ARE LIPIDS?
- Lipids are one of the four major biological molecules in nature (the other three are proteins, carbohydrates and nucleic acids).
- Lipids are organic compounds that are generally characterized by their insolubility in water.
MONOMERS OF LIPIDS:
- Lipids, like every other biological molecule, are polymeric compounds i.e. they are made up of smaller monomeric units. The monomers that make up lipids are called FATTY ACIDS.
Therefore, fatty acids are the building blocks of lipids.
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Answer: a peptide containing alternating arginines and alanines.
Explanation:
As the mRNA has a repeating unit of CGCG.
Now if we extend the units with more CG (CGCGCGCGCGCG) the pairing will be as CGC-GCG-CGC-GCG. and if we see the amino acids coded by these codons are arginine for CGC and alanine for GCG.
As this synthetic mRNA doesn't require any initiation codon (AUG) thus the polypeptide will not have methionine, which is the first amino acid in every polypeptide coded by the initiation codon.
Thus, the synthetic mRNA will code for peptide having alternating arginines and alanines amino acids.
Growth & repair and maintence if body cells and tissues and its secondary function is energy
Answer:
it is the remains of an organism that is found in the abundance nearby