Alanine
Glycine
Phenyl alanine
Argenine
Histidine
Tyrosine
The names of amino acids end in -ine.Examples: glycine, proline, phenylalanine.Exceptions: aspartic acid, glutamic acid, tryptophan.
Amino = Amine Acid = Carboxylic Acid These two groups are what give amino acid's there name. Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amino_acid
determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences? determine amino acid sequences?
proline is not an amino acid it is an imino acid
It would be four because there is one water molecule per each amino acid.
amino acid
carbohydrates, amino acids, nucleic acid, lipids
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.
The link below includes a table of codons and their respective amino acids. You can use this to determine the amino acid coded by any three nucleic acid bases. Read down, then across, then find the one you want from that block of four. In the case of CCU, the amino acid is proline.
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