Detailed Explanation
There are 20 standard amino acids encoded by the human genetic code. Each shares the same core structure — a central alpha-carbon bonded to an amino group, a carboxyl group, a hydrogen, and a variable side chain (R group). The general formula is: H₂N–CH(R)–COOH.
Amino acids are grouped by their R group properties: nonpolar (Gly, Ala, Val, Leu, Ile, Pro, Phe, Trp, Met), polar (Ser, Thr, Cys, Tyr, Asn, Gln), positively charged (Lys, Arg, His), and negatively charged (Asp, Glu).
9 amino acids are essential — the body cannot make them: histidine, isoleucine, leucine, lysine, methionine, phenylalanine, threonine, tryptophan, and valine. The remaining 11 are nonessential. Six become conditionally essential during illness or stress.
Beyond building peptides and proteins, amino acids serve as neurotransmitter precursors (tryptophan → serotonin, tyrosine → dopamine), energy sources (branched-chain amino acids), antioxidant components (cysteine in glutathione), and signaling molecules (leucine activates mTOR for muscle protein synthesis).
Key Facts
- General formula: H₂N–CH(R)–COOH
- 20 standard amino acids in the human genetic code
- 9 essential + 11 nonessential (6 conditionally essential)
- Glycine is the simplest (R = H); tryptophan is the largest
- Molecular weight range: 75 Da (glycine) to 204 Da (tryptophan); average ~128 Da
- All 20 exist as L- or D-isomers; biology uses only L-amino acids
- First isolated: asparagine from asparagus juice, 1806
Biological Function
Amino acids are the monomers of all peptides and proteins. When linked by peptide bonds, they form chains that fold into enzymes, hormones, antibodies, and structural molecules. Individual amino acids also serve critical metabolic functions as neurotransmitter precursors, energy sources, and signaling intermediates.
Example in Context
Frequently Asked Questions
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