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7/18/2025, 5:21:34 AM
>>33379419
Oh, well, that's a little different.
Attaching a sugar to a protein acts like a biochemical "address label" that tells the cell where to send the protein, such as the membrane, lysosome, or for... secretion?
Different sugars and branching patterns are recognized by specific cellular receptors that direct the protein to its proper destination.
Advice... don't think in metric or deductive terms. Proteins are like whiffle balls hucked into gale force winds, and every smattering of air current changes the probability density of its path through space. You slap a sugar label onto any protein and it'll alter its trajectory through morphic space.
Oh, well, that's a little different.
Attaching a sugar to a protein acts like a biochemical "address label" that tells the cell where to send the protein, such as the membrane, lysosome, or for... secretion?
Different sugars and branching patterns are recognized by specific cellular receptors that direct the protein to its proper destination.
Advice... don't think in metric or deductive terms. Proteins are like whiffle balls hucked into gale force winds, and every smattering of air current changes the probability density of its path through space. You slap a sugar label onto any protein and it'll alter its trajectory through morphic space.
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