
A protein is a naturally occuring polyamide. That is a polymer containing an amide group in the backbone chain. Want to see an amide group so you know just what it is I'm rambling about? Here's an amide group, and next to it a polyamide:
That R you see in betwixt the amide groups can be anything at all, but in proteins, the R is a single carbon atom, with two pendant groups attached. One pendant is a hydrogen atom, always, and the other is a wild card. It can be a lot of different things. In this picture we just represent it as R'.
There are a twenty different amino acids. Want to see 'em? Click here. Each one has a different R' group. Also, each protein has a specific sequence of the different amino acids in it. So in each protein, there is a different sequence of R' groups hanging off of the backbone chain. This sequence determines the properties of the protein.
Want to know something else? Proteins also make up silk. Silk is such nifty stuff that scientists tried to make synthetic silk. They tried to make synthetic polyamides, and what do you know, they did it! The artificial polyamides are called nylons.
You want more natural polymers? Then check out these:
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