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  1. Aspartic acid is a nonessential amino acid . Amino acids are building blocks of proteins. "Nonessential" means that our ... Aspartic acid helps every cell in the body work. It plays a role in: Hormone production and release ...
  2. ... it converts the protein building block (amino acid) aspartic acid to the amino acid asparagine. Another amino acid ... breaks down a compound called N-acetyl-L-aspartic acid (NAA) into aspartic acid (an amino acid that ...
  3. ... but has little effect on the brain, as aspartic acid does not enter the brain freely Cofactor supplementation ... and the substitution of the missing end-products. Aspartic acid is needed because in PC deficiency, oxaloacetate biosynthesis ...
  4. ... diagnosis. All described insertions lead to replacement of aspartic acid at position 87 (D87) with either glycine, aspartic acid, serin, and tyrosine (GDSY) or glycine, aspartic acid, ...
  5. ... diagnosis. All described insertions lead to replacement of aspartic acid at position 87 (D87) with either glycine, aspartic acid, serin, and tyrosine (GDSY) or glycine, aspartic acid, ...
  6. ... glycine codon and alanine, valine, glutamic acid, and aspartic acid result from substitutions in the second position of ... α1(I) chain by arginine, valine, glutamic acid, aspartic acid, and tryptophan are almost always lethal if they ...
  7. ... broth, is usually caused by glutamic acid or aspartic acid. These two amino acids are part of many ... in things like ripe tomatoes, meat and cheese. Aspartic acid is found in asparagus, for example. Sometimes glutamate ( ...
  8. ... affects how the body breaks down and uses aspartic acid . ... MRI scan Urine or blood chemistry for elevated aspartic acid DNA analysis
  9. ... A combination of two amino acids -- phenylalanine and aspartic acid. 200 times sweeter than sucrose. Loses its sweetness ...
  10. ... eat. Nonessential amino acids include: alanine, arginine, asparagine, aspartic acid, cysteine, glutamic acid, glutamine, glycine, proline, serine, and ...
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