Biology, Pages 82-91 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 6
Page 74
Other denaturation agents include chemicals that disrupt the hydrogen bonds , ionic bonds , and disulfide bridges that maintain a protein's shape . Denaturation can also result from excessive heat , which agitates the polypeptide chain ...
Other denaturation agents include chemicals that disrupt the hydrogen bonds , ionic bonds , and disulfide bridges that maintain a protein's shape . Denaturation can also result from excessive heat , which agitates the polypeptide chain ...
Page 95
The two polynucleotides , or strands , as they are called , are held together by hydrogen bonds between the paired bases and by van der Waals interactions between the stacked bases . Most DNA molecules are very long , with thousands or ...
The two polynucleotides , or strands , as they are called , are held together by hydrogen bonds between the paired bases and by van der Waals interactions between the stacked bases . Most DNA molecules are very long , with thousands or ...
Page 96
Holding the two strands together are pairs of nitrogenous bases attached to each other by hydrogen bonds . As illustrated here with symbolic shapes for the bases , adenine ( A ) can pair only with thymine ( T ) , and guanine G ) can ...
Holding the two strands together are pairs of nitrogenous bases attached to each other by hydrogen bonds . As illustrated here with symbolic shapes for the bases , adenine ( A ) can pair only with thymine ( T ) , and guanine G ) can ...
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
ability Activity Adenine amino acid sequence answers antiparallel arrangement atoms attached bind Biology blood break build built called Carbohydrates carbon cause cell chaperonin chemical complementary complex components compounds Concept conformation connected consists cytoplasm denatured deoxyribose sugars determines differ directions DNA and Proteins DNA double helix DNA molecule double helix Emergent endorphins environment enzyme fats fatty acids Figure flow folding four function genes glucose glycosidic linkages guanine hemoglobin humans hydrogen bonds inheritance interactions known linked macromolecules molecular monomers mRNA nitrogenous bases normal nucleic acids nucleotides organic oxygen pairs particular pentose phosphate group polymers polynucleotide polypeptide chain primary structure production properties Protein Structure purines pyrimidine reactions result ribosomes ring secondary separated sequence of bases serve shape share sickle-cell disease simple specific starch Steroids strand sugar sugar-phosphate backbone synthesis temperature tertiary structure three-dimensional thymine types unique