The best way to learn those 3-letter combinations is just to memorize them. Make a Study Deck - click on the Related Question to learn how - and keep practicing until you learn them all. There are only 64 combinations to learn, and if you do them a few at a time, you'll soon remember them all.
Just straight memorization, and perhaps using some mnemonics. I still have to look those structures and abbreviations up often when I need to use them. Usually, just a class will require you to use them, unless you are a protein immunologist for instance. Then using them all the time will fix them in your memory.
I dont think any particular amino acid can resist an infection! please specify your question and remember amino acids are building block of proteins.
aromatic amino acid
Amino Acid
transferred to a keto acid
The R group in an amino acid are what make that amino acid unique.
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proline is not an amino acid it is an imino acid
I dont think any particular amino acid can resist an infection! please specify your question and remember amino acids are building block of proteins.
amino acid
From a nucleic acid code to an amino acid code
A beta-amino acid is an amino acid which has the amino and carboxylic functional groups attached to adjacent carbon atoms.
Nope. To my knowledge there are only two acidic amino acids: Aspartic acid and glutamic acid.
Glycogenic amino acid is an amino acid that can be converted into glycogen bodies throught glycogenesis
there is amino acid in your stomach.
the amino acid in the batteries is NH3+
aromatic amino acid
amino acid