In general, proteins are water soluble. We have several proteins circulating in our blood. By the way, there's one type of proteins which is made for carrying cholesterol and tryglicerides (that obviously are fat soluble) through the circulation.
Water soluble, classed with the B vitamins
steriod
yes, its a protein.
hi
protein will have a net positive charge due to the protonation of all basic side chains (NH3+) in its structure therefore it will be soluble. If there is a charge at the protein surface, the protein prefers to interact with water, rather than with other protein molecules so makes it more soluble.
Not in blood, ions are usually quite water soluble.
:a simple water-soluble protein found in many animal tissues and liquids.
No it is not a lipid. Insulin is made up of proteins. It cannot be injected orally.
Water soluble molecules such as protein and RNA.
Some can dissolve but others cannot. Mostly because they are so large, proteins have groups that are soluble and parts that are not. If these specific groups are in the center of the protein structure then the whole protein is soluble however if these groups are not in the center then the protein is not soluble.
It acts as a facilitator to allow water-soluble subtances to pass through the cell membrane
Albumin and pepsin are both proteins, the test for proteins was positive.
Albumin refers to the amount of water soluble protein in the urine. A normal result would be negative.