Covalent bonds, the strongest attractions in a protein, make up the primary structure. Without a primary structure, any discussion of tertiary structure is moot.
Also another question;
I've been getting the starch vs cellulose to make bio ethanol questions wrong.
This is what I know;
In order to make bio ethanol (a biofuel) you need to start off with some simple sugars and then convert it to ethanol (can be done via fermentation). These simple sugars can be broken down from starch and cellulose.
Differences between is obviously starch would be easier to break down as plants use starch as storage, and would break starch down to get glucose for energy. On the other hand cellulose is used as structure by plants, so it would be harder to break down to simple sugars for ethanol production.
Apparently in refineries, all they have to do is add amylase to starch to break it down to glucose, then it can be used for fermentation to make ethanol. Cellulose is apparently much more complex. When cellulose is broken down, other sugar molecules excluding glucose are produced, they are harder to covert to ethanol and so makes the process slower and inefficient.
So obviously, due to efficiency and time starch would be better to use.
Could you please add any other information that I have missed? I've gotten three questions related to this stuff wrong.
Thanks