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  • 00:02

    Leah here from leah4sci.com/mcat and in this video we'll start the introduction to Amino

  • 00:10

    Acids as you have to know them for the mcat and potentially your biochemistry class.

  • 00:15

    This video we'll look at the basics and the remainder of this series will break it down

  • 00:19

    step by step to make sure that you understand every single aspect.

  • 00:24

    The first question to ask yourself is What is an Amino Acid?

  • 00:30

    Every Amino Acid has a central carbon called the alpha carbon.

  • 00:35

    Then we have the amino portion which is an amine group NH2 and an acid portion which

  • 00:42

    is a carboxylic acid.

  • 00:44

    There is also a hydrogen atom and a variable group called the R-group which is the rest

  • 00:50

    of the molecule and this will change from amino acid to amino acid.

  • 00:54

    We said the central carbon is called the Alpha Carbon and this goes back to something you

  • 00:59

    learned in Organic Chemistry.

  • 01:01

    When you had a carbon chain with a carbonyl, that carbonyl was the starting carbon, like

  • 01:07

    the ground zero where you start counting.

  • 01:10

    The first carbon attached to that was called the Alpha carbon.

  • 01:13

    The second carbon attached was the beta carbon, the third is the gamma carbon, and then the

  • 01:20

    delta and so on, and so on.

  • 01:22

    For the amino acid, if the carboxylic acid has a carbonyl at zero, the central carbon

  • 01:28

    attached to the carbonyl is the first one and therefore the alpha carbon.

  • 01:34

    This form of drawing a neutral amino acid is technically incorrect because it can't

  • 01:39

    exist like this in nature.

  • 01:41

    The amino acid naturally exists as having two ions in the backbone that cancels each

  • 01:46

    other out.

  • 01:47

    This is called the dipolar ion or the zwitterion and this can change depending on the specific

  • 01:54

    ph, something we'll look at in this zwitterion tutorial.

  • 01:56

    For now, just realize that if we take away the hydrogen on the carboxyl, we get an Oxygen

  • 02:03

    with three lone pairs and a negative charge.

  • 02:05

    And if we add a hydrogen to the amino we get four bonds to Nitrogen, we took away its lone

  • 02:12

    pair and we get a positive charge.

  • 02:14

    We'll show the amino acid as AA for short.

  • 02:18

    And notice in the backbone we have 4 common atoms.

  • 02:24

    We have carbon, oxygen, nitrogen, and hydrogen.

  • 02:30

    Two of the R-groups also have sulfur and this is important for being able to distinguish

  • 02:36

    between amino acids and nucleotides which is another very important molecule in a living

  • 02:41

    system.

  • 02:43

    Nucleotides which make up DNA and RNA also have carbon, oxygen, nitrogen, and hydrogen

  • 02:48

    but they have a phosphorous in their backbone and they don't have sulfur so that's the qa

  • 02:53

    to distinguish which type of molecule it came from.

  • 02:58

    And why are amino acids so important?

  • 03:00

    They are the monomers, the single unit that make up a very important structure key to

  • 03:06

    the survival of a cell and that is proteins.

  • 03:11

    Proteins forms so many important critical structures of the cell, from holding it together

  • 03:17

    like the cytoskeleton, enzymes that catalyze reactions, structural components for example

  • 03:23

    in the cell membranes or holding proteins, dna, and different things together, transport

  • 03:29

    in signalling so we have proteins acting as carrier molecules, peptide hormones which

  • 03:34

    are made up of Amino Acids and we can even use it for energy on the cell if we need to.

  • 03:40

    And these are just some examples.

  • 03:43

    Amino acids are the building blocks of proteins.

  • 03:46

    And if you take the twenty most common amino acids, and you change the sequence in which

  • 03:51

    they're attached, and the link of the chain you get an infinite number of possibilities

  • 03:56

    of different types of proteins that can be formed.

  • 04:00

    There are twenty common amino acids that you need to know for the MCAT.

  • 04:05

    Understand that there can be more, through modification or rare ones, but the twenty

  • 04:10

    common ones are the ones you need to memorize.

  • 04:13

    These can be broken down into essential amino acids, meaning the body can't synthesize these

  • 04:19

    amino acids so you have to get it from your diet.

  • 04:23

    And then the non-essential amino acids which your body can synthesize using the essential

  • 04:28

    amino acids as the starting point.

  • 04:31

    You don't have to memorize this but the 9 essential amino acids are histidine, leucine,

  • 04:38

    isoleucine, lysine, methionine, phenylalanine, threonine, tryptophan, and valine.

  • 04:44

    The non-essential include the conditionally essential but we'll just classify them as

  • 04:49

    non-essential in general which means that the body can make them depending on the circumstances.

  • 04:55

    That includes alanine, asparagine, aspartic acid, and arginine, glutamic acid, glutamine,

  • 05:02

    glycine, proline, serine, tyrosine, and cysteine.

  • 05:08

    What sets these amino acids apart?

  • 05:12

    It's the R-group.

  • 05:13

    The r-group is a variable group and this is what changes from amino acid to amino acid.

  • 05:20

    This group gives the amino acid its special characteristics, determines how it interacts

  • 05:25

    with other amino acids and ultimately determines how it interacts with this environment and

  • 05:30

    all the molecules around it.

  • 05:32

    The amino acids will be classified based on the chemistry of that R-group.

  • 05:37

    We can simply separate them into the hydrophobic and hydrophilic groups.

  • 05:43

    Instead of memorizing why an amino acid falls into a certain category, I want you to understand

  • 05:50

    what about the chemistry of the R-group makes it fall into that category.

  • 05:54

    That way when you look at the side chain, you'll be able to look at it and understand

  • 05:58

    what's going on.

  • 06:00

    If you break this word down, we have hydrophobic means fearing and philic means loving.

  • 06:07

    Water is a very common molecule.

  • 06:11

    Most of the world is made up of water and even most of your body is water.

  • 06:15

    Water has one oxygen atom and two hydrogen atoms.

  • 06:19

    Oxygen is highly electronegative, that means even though it's bound to hydrogen with a

  • 06:25

    covalent bond, a sharing bond, Oxygen is greedy and it tries to pull on the electrons from

  • 06:33

    the bond towards itself.

  • 06:35

    In pulling down those electrons we have a pulling or polar bond and this concentrates

  • 06:41

    the negativity of the bond around the oxygen taking it away from hydrogen.

  • 06:46

    That extra negativity around the oxygen makes it partially negative, and hydrogen having

  • 06:52

    its positive nucleus exposed is now partially positive.

  • 06:56

    That gives the oxygen portion of water a partial negative charge, the hydrogen portion, a partial

  • 07:02

    positive charge, and this polarity allows it to interact with other molecules, like

  • 07:07

    water molecules or amino acid side chains.

  • 07:11

    When you look at a side chain, ask yourself, does it want to interact with water?

  • 07:16

    Does it have a charge or partial charge that can associate with the partial negative oxygen

  • 07:22

    or partial positive hydrogen?

  • 07:24

    Or is it completely hydrophobic meaning it fears water because it has no way to interact

  • 07:29

    with it.

  • 07:31

    Hydrophobic is non-polar, there is no polarity to interact with water and hydrophilic side

  • 07:38

    chains will be polar, meaning they have partial charges or fully charged like your acidic

  • 07:43

    and basic side chains.

  • 07:46

    The hydrophobic side chains can be broken up into two categories, the Aliphatic, and

  • 07:53

    Aromatic side chains.

  • 07:55

    These are terms you should recognize from Organic chemistry.

  • 07:58

    Aliphatic is linear, non-cyclical.

  • 08:02

    It doesn't have aromaticity so think of these as your linear or non-aromatic side chains.

  • 08:10

    Aromatic side-chains have aromatic groups within them.

  • 08:14

    For example, benzene or even heterocyclic aromatic compounds.

  • 08:20

    See the link below if you need a review on aromaticity.

  • 08:24

    Hydrophilic side chains can also be broken down.

  • 08:27

    We said that hydrophilic side chains can be polar.

  • 08:31

    That means partial charges but not full charges.

  • 08:34

    And if we don't have a full charge, then the side chain is neutral.

  • 08:38

    What you're looking for in these side chains are oxygen and nitrogen atoms, but without

  • 08:43

    a protonation-deprotonation going on.

  • 08:46

    For the charged side chain, we're going to see acidic and basic components.

  • 08:52

    The charged side chains can get a charge by donating or accepting a proton.

  • 08:58

    Donating a proton acid or accepting a proton base.

  • 09:02

    And yes, we'll break them all down in the upcoming videos.

  • 09:06

    Another thing to keep in mind is that amino acids have chirality or stereochemistry.

  • 09:12

    In Organic Chemistry you learn this as R&S, but in biochemistry we'll use the configuration

  • 09:19

    of D&L.

  • 09:21

    The amino acid chirality video, we'll break it down and show you how to find the chirality

  • 09:26

    but for now keep this in mind, Eukaryotic organisms like the L form of amino acids and

  • 09:33

    they don't like the D form of amino acids.

  • 09:37

    If you're asking, does D&L convert to R&S?

  • 09:40

    the answer is, it can be both.

  • 09:42

    R&S does not specifically tell me D&L and I'll show you how to recognize this in the

  • 09:49

    amino acid chirality video.

  • 09:52

    And finally, in understanding amino acids as an essential component of protein, it's

  • 09:57

    critical to understand how they react.

  • 10:01

    Later in this series, we'll look at three important amino acid reactions.

  • 10:06

    When amino acids are brought together, they form a peptide bond and you can think of this

  • 10:10

    as dehydration synthesis because you're synthesizing the bond, you're bringing the two amino acids

  • 10:16

    together and in the process taking out a molecule of H2O.

  • 10:21

    If connecting amino acids takes out the water molecule, then you can imagine that to break

  • 10:26

    apart a peptide bond into the separate acids, you have to put the water back.

  • 10:32

    And this is called the hydrolysis reaction.

  • 10:35

    Which comes from the word, hydro, adding the water back in, and lysis to break.

  • 10:41

    Another critical reaction is Sulfur linkage creating disulfide bridges, and this is the

  • 10:48

    only covalent bond that forms between amino acid side chains to strengthen that three

  • 10:53

    dimensional tertiary or Quaternary protein structure.

  • 10:57

    Now that you have an idea of what you need to know, let's break it down step by step.

  • 11:03

    Make sure you download the amino acid cheat sheet so you can follow along as you watch

  • 11:07

    this entire series and then try the amino acid practice quiz.

  • 11:11

    You can find all of these on my website leah4sci.com/AminoAcids.

All

The example sentences of HISTIDINE in videos (1 in total of 1)

you personal pronoun do verb, non-3rd person singular present n't adverb have verb, base form to to memorize verb, base form this determiner but coordinating conjunction the determiner 9 cardinal number essential adjective amino noun, singular or mass acids noun, plural are verb, non-3rd person singular present histidine noun, singular or mass , leucine noun, singular or mass ,

Definition and meaning of HISTIDINE

What does "histidine mean?"

/ˈhistəˌdēn/

noun
basic amino acid which is constituent of most proteins.
other
An essential amino acid found in proteins that is important for the growth and repair of tissue.