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  • Amino Acids

    Amino Acids

    Categorizing the
    Building Blocks of Life

    This section provides some of the hard data gained from decades of research on amino acids. If you find this section too "scientific," "bookish," or just not practical enough in terms of your immediate health concerns, click here to go to the sub-site describing the action of all 20 amino acids.

    Most textbooks will tell you that there are 20 amino acids. However, there are actually hundreds of them, some of them short-lived, some of them modifications of the main 20. We will call those the "minor amino acids." For example, Serine is counted as one of the main 20, but phosphoserine, another important amino acid, is never classified among the major 20 and is a minor amino acid.

    Classifying amino acids helps us break them down into smaller byte-size pieces so that we can better mentally ingest them. When we mentally understand amino acids, it becomes obvious why one should not just mentally ingest them, but should take them by mouth in order to enhance our energy, concentration, performance... and help us recover from illness, whether acute or chronic.

    Here are 6 different ways to categorize amino acids:

    I - Essential Versus Non Essential

    Essential Amino Acids

    (You must include them in your diet because your body can't make them on its own. If you don't ingest them, you will not be experiencing optimal health and may have a disease caused by that deficiency.)

    Arginine
    Histidine
    Methionine
    Threonine
    Valine
    Isoleucine
    Lysine
    Phenylalanine
    Tryptophan
    Leucine

    Non-Essential Amino Acids

    (Under normal conditions, your body can manufacture these amino acids, so you don't have to ingest each of these).

    Alanine
    Asparagine
    Aspartic Acid
    Cysteine
    Glutamine
    Glutamic Acid
    Glycine
    Proline
    Serine
    Tyrosine

    Conditionally Essential

    (If your system is stressed, out of balance, or diseased, these amino acids become essential and you must get them from food or supplements).

    Arginine
    Glycine
    Cystine
    Tyrosine
    Proline
    Glutamine
    Taurine

    Essential amino acids are considered to be ones that we must ingest, while non-essential have historically been believed to be produced inside our bodies. In other words, it has been felt that we do not need to supplement our diet with non-essential amino acids.

    This thinking does not hold up well in the light of actual, clinical experience. When we are suffering from a moderate to severe chronic illness, we lose the ability to manufacture enough non-essential amino acids, and thus require supplementation. Problems with digestion will also necessitate supplementation of "non-essential" amino acids. Most people have been told that if you eat a balanced diet, you'll get all the amino acids you need. That simply is not true if you are significantly out of balance. For example, if your amino acid testing reveals a significantly low Tryptophan, you will have to eat several turkeys a day... or gallons of milk to get enough Tryptophan from a natural source. Recent research has led to a third category within this classification system, namely, "Conditionally Essential." These amino acids are normally non-essential, but become essential during times of physiological stress.

    II - Classification According to Charge and Polarity of Side Chains (R-Group)

    Nonpolar (Hydrophobic) Side Chains

    Alanine
    Glycine
    Leucine
    Valine
    Isoleucine
    Phenylalanine
    Tryptophan
    Methionine
    Proline

    Uncharged Polar (Hydrophilic) Side Chains

    Asparagine
    Glutamine
    Cysteine
    Serine
    Threonine
    Tyrosine

    Acid Side Chains

    Aspartic Acid
    Glutamic Acid

    Basic Side Chains

    Arginine
    Histidine
    Lysine

    III - Glycogenic and/or Ketogenic

    Glycogenic

    Glycogenic amino acids have the ability to be converted into glucose.

    Alanine
    Arginine
    Asparagine
    Aspartic Acid
    Cysteine
    Glutamic Acid
    Glutamine
    Glycine
    Histidine
    Methionine
    Proline
    Serine

    Ketogenic

    Ketogenic amino acids have the ability to be converted into ketones. The process of ketone formation involves both the breakdown of fats and the formation of a source of energy.

    Leucine
    Lysine

    Both Glycogenic and Ketogenic

    Isoleucine
    Phenylalanine
    Threonine
    Tyrosine
    Tryptophan

    IV - Proteogenic Versus Non-Proteogenic

    The 40,000 different kinds of protein in the human body are made up of 20 amino acids. Before we list the amino acids in these 2 groups, let's cover the vast role that proteins play:

    1. Enzymes
    2. Structural protein &emdash; collagen and connective tissue
    3. Contractile proteins &emdash; muscle tissue.
    4. Transport proteins &emdash; hemoglobin
    5. Immune proteins &emdash; immunoglobulins
    6. Regulatory proteins &emdash; hormones

    Essential Proteogenic (protein-producing) Amino Acids

    Histidine
    Isoleucine
    Leucine
    Lysine
    Methionine
    Phenylalanine
    Threonine
    Tryptophan
    Valine

    Non-Essential Proteogenic (protein-producing) Amino Acids

    Alanine
    Arginine
    Aspartic Acid
    Asparagine
    Cysteine
    Glutamic Acid
    Glutamine
    Proline
    Serine
    Tyrosine

    Non-Proteogenic Amino Acids

    The non-proteogenic amino acids are generally metabolites or analogues of the proteogenic amino acids:

    Ornithine, a minor amino acid is made from Arginine.

    Taurine is made from methionine and cysteine.

    Hydroxyproline and Hydroxylysine, both minor amino acids, are made from proline and lysine.

    V - Amino Acids by Structure

    Amino acids can be grouped according to the structure of the side chains, or the R-Group (see amino acid graphic)

    1. Aliphatic
    Alanine
    Glycine
    Isoleucine
    Leucine
    Proline
    Valine

    2. Aromatic
    Phenylalanine
    Tryptophan
    Tyrosine

    3. Acidic
    Aspartic Acid
    Glutamic Acid

    4. Basic
    Arginine
    Histidine
    Lysine

    5. Hydroxylic
    Serine
    Threonine

    6. Sulfur-Containing
    Cysteine
    Methionine
    Taurine

    7. Amidic (containing amide group)
    Asparagine
    Glutamine

    VI - Amino Acid Functions

    For the clinician (or educated healthcare consumer) understanding amino acids according to their functions is the most useful approach, and leads directly to recommendations for supplementation. In this section, you will notice more than the usual 20 amino acids, for this grouping includes a number of the lessor-known amino acids. Also notice that a particular amino acid may appear in more than one category. For example Glutamine is categorized as a Neurotransmitter, Glycogenic, and Branched Chain Amino Acid.

    This "Functional" way of understanding and classifying amino acids builds on the "Glycogenic Versus Ketogenic" system and greatly amplifies and clarifies amino acid functions.

    Neurotransmitter Amino Acids

    Abnormalities in this group are widespread in their implications, and are seen in virtually all mental/emotional problems, primary brain problems (stroke, Alzheimer's Disease, epilepsy), depression, anxiety, insomnia, poor concentration, memory problems, and mental exhaustion.

    Aspartic Acid
    Asparagine
    Gamma Amino Butyric Acid (GABA) (minor amino acid)
    Glutamic Acid
    Glutamine
    Glycine
    Phenylalanine
    Taurine
    Tryptophan
    Tyrosine

    Branched Chain Amino Acids (BCAA)

    This group contributes to protein synthesis. Surgery, Deficiencies are associated with injury, exercise, and muscle wasting.

    With Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS), one usually sees deficiencies in this group, which relates to easy fatiguability, and post-exertional exhaustion.

    Glutamine
    Isoleucine
    Leucine
    Valine

    Sulfur-Containing Amino Acids

    Deficiencies in this group are associated with food allergies and chemical sensitivity.

    Cystine/Cysteine
    Methionine
    Taurine

    Glycogenic Amino Acids

    Deficiencies in this group are associated with problems with sugar metabolism, diabetes mellitus, hypoglycemia, candidiasis, poor concentration, abnormalities in zinc and/or chromium levels, and fatigue.

    Alanine
    Glutamine
    Glycine
    Serine
    Threonine

    Urea Cycle Amino Acids

    Deficiencies in this group can be associated with liver disease, kidney disease, or strenuous exercise.

    Arginine
    Aspartic Acid
    Citrulline (minor amino acid)
    Ornithine (minor amino acid)

    Connective Tissue Amino Acids

    Abnormalities within this group are associated with trauma, surgery, muscle wasting, and strenuous exercise.

    Hydroxyproline (minor amino acid)
    Hydroxylysine (minor amino acid)
    Proline

    Amino Acids that Give Clues about Non-Amino Acid Deficiencies

    Phosphoserine (minor amino acid)

    Elevated blood levels of Phosphoserine is predictive of a deficiency of pyridoxal-5-phosphate (P5P), a critical form of vitamin B-6. Without adequate blood levels of P5P, many amino acid reactions become impaired. In particular, tyrosine cannot be converted to norepinephrine without P5P, and tryptophan cannot be converted into serotonin.

    Histidine

    Abnormally high levels of histidine are associated with abnormally low levels of zinc, and vice versa,

    Taurine

    Abnormally low levels of taurine are suggestive of vitamin B12 deficiency, zinc deficiency, and vitamin A deficiency. With low taurine levels, one should do extra lab work to evaluate B 12, vitamin A, and zinc.

    Arginine (deficiency indicates a weakened immune system).

    Histidine (deficiency is associated with auto-immune disease)

    Lysine (deficiency is suggestive of viral infection).

    Taurine (deficiency is suggestive of generalized candidiasis)

    Threonine (deficiency is associated with AIDS).

    This web site goes into detailed description of the 20 "primary" amino acids as well as many of the "secondary" or "minor amino acids."

    Click here for those detailed descriptions so that you can better understand the powerful role amino acids play in your life. You can begin to examine your own life, your state of wellness, or illness by understanding what these building blocks of life do.


    Found here;
    Amino Acids

  • #2
    Re: Amino Acids

    thnx this should be a sticky.
    all information is for entertainment purposes only and i dont condone the illegal use of steroids! iam just on here for fun and anything said is fictitious not real!!!!!!!!

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