izzasector Posted September 15, 2008 Posted September 15, 2008 Protein has it's own structure and own ion bonds beetwean two ends of the protein.Moving end of the protein has energy E=mc2 and electron is moving on it's orbit too.The electron of another end is moving of one radius round through gravity.Artefacts of orbits of nearest electrons and statical electrocity are appearing.Speed is lifting up.The energy of whole protein is constant.
insane_alien Posted September 15, 2008 Posted September 15, 2008 that made no sense at all and doesn't describe proteins either.
Mr Skeptic Posted September 15, 2008 Posted September 15, 2008 You're saying that proteins are made of word salad? :confused:
Phi for All Posted September 15, 2008 Posted September 15, 2008 Is this similar to the "my own conception in biological chemistry" thread? That one got closed because you were asked to post your ideas here instead of soliciting email addresses to mail it to, and you failed to respond after ten days. Do you have any further work on your protein concept to show? What you've opened with is vague. Please elaborate.
I_Pwn_Crackpots Posted September 15, 2008 Posted September 15, 2008 I may be wrong but don't proteins look more like this? This particular one is a ribosomal protein, but there are hundreds of different proteins all together.
insane_alien Posted September 15, 2008 Posted September 15, 2008 there are more than hundreds. there is no definite limit on the number of proteins that can exist in theory but practical limitations would come into play and not all possible proteins are useful.
Sisyphus Posted September 15, 2008 Posted September 15, 2008 Well, I wouldn't say they look like that, no...
Mr Skeptic Posted September 15, 2008 Posted September 15, 2008 there are more than hundreds. there is no definite limit on the number of proteins that can exist in theory but practical limitations would come into play and not all possible proteins are useful. Just keep adding more and more amino acids until it collapses into a black hole! Actually the pressure would probably alter enough bonds that it couldn't be considered a protein well before that, but its fun to dream.
I_Pwn_Crackpots Posted September 15, 2008 Posted September 15, 2008 Well, I wouldn't say they look like that, no... Why wouldn't you say that? All atoms in a molecule attach themselves in specific angles. We would have a pretty good idea of what they would look like, if only we could actually see them.
insane_alien Posted September 15, 2008 Posted September 15, 2008 well, a spacefilling model rather than a stick model would look more realistic.
I_Pwn_Crackpots Posted September 15, 2008 Posted September 15, 2008 well, a spacefilling model rather than a stick model would look more realistic. Yeah, that's true. But sticks help the great masses like myself visualize it alot better .
Sisyphus Posted September 16, 2008 Posted September 16, 2008 Well, exactly. It's a diagram, not a drawing. That's all I meant. Molecules aren't multi-colored lines. They're clusters of indistinct blobs, and they don't particularly look like anything. But you're dead on about those angles.
izzasector Posted May 24, 2009 Author Posted May 24, 2009 Gravity cylinder increases mass and lenght of proteins parts.Atoms get in to the free site.Electrons of prelast and last orbitals set at the higher level.
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