< A-level Chemistry < OCR (Salters)
α-Amino acids
- The general structure of an α-amino acid. The α-carbon is displayed in orange, and the side chain is denoted by R. This style of diagram does not indicate whether the amino acid is an L or a D enantiomer.
- The stereochemistry of an L-amino acid. All amino acids in nature are L-amino acids, except for bacterial cell walls and the odd w:en:cone snail or two.
- A skeletal formula of a general α-amino acid. The α-carbon is displayed as an orange circle
- The skeletal formula of a general L-α-amino acid, the enantiomeric form found in nature.
- The skeletal formula of a general D-α-amino acid, the enantiomeric form not found in nature. D-amino acids can be synthesised artificially in a laboratory.
The twenty protein-forming amino acids
glycine
Gly, GL-alanine
Ala, AL-valine
Val, VL-leucine
Leu, LL-isoleucine
Ile, IL-phenylalanine
Phe, FL-proline
Pro, PL-tryptophan
Trp, WL-serine
Ser, SL-threonine
Thr, TL-cysteine
Cys, CL-methionine
Met, ML-aspartic acid
Asp, DL-glutamic acid
Glu, EL-asparagine
Asn, NL-glutamine
Gln, QL-tyrosine
Tyr, YL-histidine
His, HL-lysine
Lys, KL-arginine
Arg, R
Reactions of amino acids
Amino acids can undergo condensation reactions, forming polypeptides.
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