Answer:
RNA catalyzes the formation of peptide bonds
Explanation:
The formation of a peptide bomb between two amino acids in translation which occurs in the ribosomes is catalyzed by peptidyl transferase. Peptidyl transferase is an enzyme that catalyzes addition of amino acid to a growing polypeptide chain and found in the large subunit of the ribosomes. For prokaryotes, the 50S (23S componenet) and for eukaryotes, the 60S (28S component). Its activity is mainly mediated by rRNA and not proteins and thus the region is always referred to as a ribozyme: only enzymes not made up of proteins.
The answer is peroxisomes.
<span>Cells that specialize in breaking down harmful by-products of metabolism need to have a lot of peroxisomes.
</span>
Peroxisomes are <span>small organelles that contain enzymes involved metabolic reactions. They breakdown </span><span>substrates like uric acid, amino acids, and fatty acids.</span>
Answer:
Acids react with bases to produce a salt compound and water. When equal moles of an acid and a base are combined, the acid is neutralized by the base. The products of this reaction are an ionic compound, which is labeled as a salt, and water.
Acids, bases and salts affect chemistry as well as our day to day life. They can be easily identified by their taste; that is acids taste sour and bases taste bitter and salts itself have salty taste.
Hope that helped. x
Answer:
the process by which green plants and some other organisms use sunlight to synthesize foods from carbon dioxide and water. Photosynthesis in plants generally involves the green pigment chlorophyll and generates oxygen as a byproduct.