New Amino Acid Discovered 142
EricMargel writes: "As published in Science, researchers at the Ohio State University claim to have discovered the 22nd known amino acid, pyrrolysine, the first discovered since 1986." I hope rice and beans are still sufficient to get all the needed amino acids.
Do you hear that GNC? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:These scientists need to work on... (Score:4, Interesting)
Beano is the magic pill. Alpha-galactose. True, it's an enzyme, not a protein, but a protein isn't going to stop farts, which are mainly caused by sugars we can't digest but which the bugs in our intestines can.
woof.
Re:These scientists need to work on... (Score:1)
Re:These scientists need to work on... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:These scientists need to work on... (Score:1)
Re:These scientists need to work on... (Score:1)
I wonder if it's really healthy... I like beans
Re:These scientists need to work on... (Score:1)
In the small intestine are billions of bacteria that help your digestion process. In fact 50% of your poop isn't food, it's dead bacteria!
If you don't have an enzyme to break the sugar down and absorb it, bacteria in the (usually large) intestine will. They break down the lactose, galactose, etc, and produce ... methane (ie - farts).
If you take your beano or lactaid, it provides an enzyme that will break down the sugar into simpler components that you can absorb, so the bacteria won't process them.
Most pills you take are 90+% buffer. Stomach acid will dissolve the outer part, and leave anything inside untouched.
Re:These scientists need to work on... (Score:1)
All vegetables have fibre. You don't have to eat beans to get fibre, or even get the most fibre you can out of vegetables. But if you are dead set on eating beans for fibre, take into account that the sugars are rotting inside your body. So *your* choice comes down to, ok do I eat beans for fibre even though they rot in my body, or do I eat some other vegetable that won't rot in my body but still gives fibre?
Who cares if a food has a positive side if it also has a negative side. IMO putting something that causes problems into your body is irresponsible.
Not just sugars (Score:2)
Better way to prevent gas (Score:1)
Beans alone break the first rule of food combining; Don't eat carbs and proteins together.
To break down protein which is an acid your stomach has to create an acidic environment. Carbohydrates are alkaline. The enzymes that break down Carbohydrates require an alkaline environment and can not function in the high pH environment required for proteins. So after being continuously bathed in acid and not allowed to digest, the carbs will finally move on to your small intestines where the environment is alkaline again and then, finally, start digesting.
Food goes bad inside your body just like it does on the table. And your body temperature is a lot higher than room temperature, which seems to accelerate the process. You've heard of carbohydrates "fermenting" inside of you right, and that's why you get gas after eating beans? I think the word "rot" is a little less misleading.
Other than itroducing rotting food into your body, beans also make your stomach produce a very acidic environment, which is bad for your overall health.
Point is, beans are bad foods. Unless you just don't have a choice, you are better off eating something else. But if you are buying beano and so on, I'd assume you have another choice.
Re:Better way to prevent gas (Score:1)
I'm familiar with the "rules of food combining" ideas, though I don't really think it works. But in any case, you're misinterpreting it. Let me quote directly from A Complete Guide to Nature Cure [healthlibrary.com]'s chapter on food combining [healthlibrary.com]:
"The most important rule for combining foods is to avoid mixing protein and carbohydrate concentrated foods. Although every food contains some protein , those regarded as protein concentrated foods demand the longest digestive time."
By these rules, what you are avoiding is meals where you are eating both protein concentrated and carbohydrate concentrated foods. Key word is "concentrated." Beans aren't protein concentrated. They have high carbs and are low in protein. They don't "rot" inside your body. They are in general a great source of carbs and very good for you.
It sounds to me like you read a lot of questionable information and took it as truth. Don't believe everything you read. Give beans a try again, they really are good foods.
I never have gas because of any kind of beans, even refried beans. I usually eat raw vegatables (spinach, carrots, lettuce, etc) with my meals which seems to help digestion. Just out of curiosity, what is your diet like?
BTW That nature cure book I linked to has a chapter on amino acids [healthlibrary.com].
My mistake. I should have said dried beans. (Score:1)
Also, dried beans are concentrated proteins and concentrated carbohydrates. I really should haven't written that without saying DRIED beans. My bad. But I just assumed that most people aren't really ever getting that many undried beans, especially if they are eating refried beans like you mentioned. I'm amazed that you don't get gas from refried beans. Unless you are eating beano or something.
Regardless, I get gas everytime I eat dried beans. Everyone I've asked does.
Both of us appear to be talking a little too generally, but just to name a bean that is equally high in carbs as it is in protein is soy.
Now on a more arguing side of things: What mislead you into thinking that the same amount of protein and carbs have to be in the food? Can you even name any foods that have more proteins than carbs besides meats? I can think of 2 right off, soybeans and peanuts. And both are beans, imagine that.
I don't just read crap and regurgitate it. I've been using food combination and other natural methods to bring myself to good health, and not specifically, but since it's part of our discussion, I've also used them to get rid of gas. Maybe I'm more inclined to having gas than other people or something, but food combination has worked quite well for me. But I don't have an intestine full of impacted unhealthy foods either, so maybe that also attributes to my not getting gas from using food combination.
Personally though, I can't see how you can argue with rule #1. It's pretty freaking straight forward. Carbs dont break down in acid.
Re:My mistake. I should have said dried beans. (Score:2, Interesting)
I've tried food combination myself, and some of it works, some of it doesn't really make a difference. The mixing carbs and proteins rule didn't really didn't make a difference for me, and I've found plenty of "health experts" who contradicted the rule and said it was fallacious. To eat all meals completely devoid of either carbs or protein doesn't make sense to me. I would be malnourished if I did this. Even the vegatables I typically eat have both protein and carbs.
There are some parts of food combining that are true for me. For example, if I eat bananas and oranges together (sweet fruits and acid fruits), I usually have indigestion.
I guess whatever works for you. Everyone's diet needs are different. I just can't imagine life without beans.
Re:My mistake. I should have said dried beans. (Score:1)
Not that you're suppose to eat as much unconcetrated proteins and carbs as you can fit into your stomach either though.
Dude you dont know anything (Score:2)
If you dont eat carbs protien goes straight to fat instead of muscle forming, all atheletes and bodybuilders know that.
Carbs must ALWAYS be consumed with Protien and Fat.
Now its true eating all 3 together give you higher chance of having gas, but whats better, having gas, or being a blimp without gas?
Eat just carbs alone and you'll be as fat as a sumo, Eat only protein and your body will burn muscle for energy as it adapts to this, Eat a balanced diet of all 3, with each meal, and youll be fine.
Re:Better way to prevent gas (Score:1)
Do you honestly eat several servings of beans every day? Can you give an example? I'm not questioning your honestly now, just really curious how someone eats several servings of beans every day.
Re:Better way to prevent gas (Score:1)
And one thing that seems to help is to just drink enough water when you are eating. A tall glass or two helps in digestion, as well as most other body processes.
Re:These scientists need to work on... (Score:1)
Re:These scientists need to work on... (Score:1)
Ramen Noodles (Score:2)
Yet..., I continue to eat it.
(just finished some)
I don't know what i'm saying, i'm drunk...
Re:Ramen Noodles (Score:2)
Re:Ramen Noodles (Score:2)
That is why I love this side of the country.
And plenty of code space for more. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:And plenty of code space for more. (Score:2, Funny)
I think an UTF8-like scheme would be safer, for future enhancements and the like.
Re:And plenty of code space for more. (Score:2, Funny)
Of course. And we've only found the redundant ones at this point.
64-22=42. QED.
Re:And plenty of code space for more. (Score:1)
Buldozer (Score:1)
Re:And plenty of code space for more. (Score:1)
Having a codon doesn't mean there is an amino acid (Score:1)
Re:And plenty of code space for more. (Score:1)
Re:And plenty of code space for more. (Score:1)
mmmmm...tryptophan.... tryptophan => tryptamines => fun dreams
I found the article a little frustrating... (Score:2, Interesting)
"Surprisingly, the codon Krzycki's team identified should have signaled a stop to protein building but it did not."
it must be one of those. They previously-known-to-be-stop codons are: UAA, UGA, and UAG (did I miss any?). So which one is it? If you know, please reply to this post.
For reference, here [ultranet.com] is a good page for more info on codons, their product amino acids and more.
Re:I found the article a little frustrating... (Score:2, Informative)
"Then in 1998, they published a paper showing that the gene had a component called an in-frame amber codon that behaved unusually."
"Amber" = UAG
Re:And plenty of code space for more. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:And plenty of code space for more. (Score:3, Informative)
Incidentally, while the genetic code is pretty much universal, there are some variations. For example, in mitochondria, instead of functioning as a STOP codon, UGA encodes for tryptophan; instead of coding for isoleucine, AUA encodes for methionine; instead of coding for arginine, AGA and AGG function as STOP codons.
This suggests another regulatory pathway as well. (Score:3, Interesting)
Now consider this. What if the cell produced the matching tRNA and associated "new amino acid" only intermittantly. When it was available, this stop-codon wouldn't be a stop codon at all and translation would continue, but when it was missing, translation would stop.
This raises another interesting question (that may already be answered). Some organisms can not synthesize all the amino acids and must obtain some of them from dietary sources. These amino acids are referred to as the essential amino acids for that organism. If their diet is deficient in these essential amino acids, they can't make all the proteins they need, and bad things generally happen.
So, the question is, what happens at a translational level in this situation? Does translation just stop, leaving shorter peptide chains? Are their situations where the products of partial translation have biological activity?
Re:And plenty of code space for more. (Score:3, Funny)
EVERYONE knows the number they're looking for is gonna end up being 42. every other pair will be unstable, and the meaning of like will be proven to be 42. and douglas adams will rise from the grave and lead us to salvation.
Re:And plenty of code space for more. (Score:2)
Re:And plenty of code space for more. (Score:2)
Also, IIRC half the codespace is taken up by the left/right dichotomy... Each amino acid can be left/right, but for some reason all of them are right-handed. The tRNA that decodes the DNA must convert all of the code sequences to right-handedness as it builds amino acids. That way, you can decode EITHER half of a DNA strand and get the same results...
I'll take "Reasons I Majored in Engineering" (Score:4, Funny)
for $500 please Alex
...What is Organic Chemistry.
Re:I'll take "Reasons I Majored in Engineering" (Score:2, Funny)
Re:I'll take "Reasons I Majored in Engineering" (Score:2)
I'm guessing that the thing I didn't like was the thing that you liked, considering that I found it too engineeringy.
Re:I'll take "Reasons I Majored in Engineering" (Score:1)
Re:I'll take "Reasons I Majored in Engineering" (Score:1)
jaymz
What's its structure? (Score:1)
BTW, there are many variations of amino-acids known, all made by post-processing. There are still only twenty directly coded for in DNA, AFAIK. This looks like something in-between, coded for by the stop-codon, but somehow this one is treated special.
Re:What's its structure? (Score:1)
21st amino acid (Score:3, Informative)
The amino acid they discovered in 1986 is selenocysteine, which is also encoded for by a STOP codon (UGA in this case). Maybe there is an entire class of amino acids that are encoded in this manner, in between the 20 directly encoded amino acids and the multifarious post-translationally modified amino acids (e.g., hydroxyproline and hydroxylysine in collagen; gamma-carboxyglutamate in various clotting factors)
And you probably need more than just a STOP codon to incorporate pyrrolysine. With selenocysteine, you need enzymes to convert the serine residue on the tRNA to selenocysteine, an enzyme to activate the inorganic selenium, and a modified translation factor that recognizes this special case.
Re:21st amino acid (Score:4, Funny)
This sure sounds like a kluge. Who designed this system, anyway? They need to clean up their code.
Re:21st amino acid (Score:2)
This sure sounds like a kluge. Who designed this system, anyway? They need to clean up their code.
It's called redundancy, man. That's when god decides to play her cards right, in case she dies/retires early.
Re:21st amino acid (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:21st amino acid (Score:1)
The extended numbering (21st, 22nd) for this class sounds a bit unwarrented to me though. Although I can see the PR-perspective...
Re:21st amino acid (Score:1, Informative)
Proposed structure of sidechain is:
-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-NH-(C=O)-C5-C4-X
where C5 and C4 are part of a pyrrol ring (5-membered, N at position 1, double bond N1-C2) and X is listed as CH3/NH2/OH - not clear if they mean it is variable or as yet uncertain.
Interesting to note that, even at final year college level, they still go with the "There are 20 genetically coded amino acids" dogma.
triplet vs. extended codons (Score:2)
Also, the UGA stop codon is a good choice, since the ribosome will pause there longer than the typical amino acid coding sequence and it also has a higher readthrough probability than other more efficient stop codons - both of which are helpful for more involved tRNA-mRNA interactions.
genetic code non-universal (Score:4, Interesting)
So finding a bacteria like what this artical describes is only a mild suprise.
Great detective work though. Alot of people would have decided it was alot easier to call this an abberation than to spend ~2 years finding out what was really going on.
Re:What's its structure? (Score:1)
Pyrrole is a five membered aromatic ring with 4 carbon atoms and one nitrogen atom.
The name pyrrolysine sugests that pyrrole might be the fourth group bonded to the central carbon atom.(But thats just a guess on my part)
If it is pyrrole bonded to the central carbon atom then there are three ways in which it could do it: (1) to the nitrogen (2) to one of the the two carbon atoms closest to the nitrogen (3) to one of the carbon atoms furthest from the nitrogen. Again it would just be a guess on my part as to which of these it is.
Tom.
The origins of life (Score:1)
Re:The origins of life (Score:1)
Save yourself some time-
Between The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy and Monty Python's "The Meaning of Life" you will find this, and many other such questions, covered.
Importance of this discovery? (Score:5, Interesting)
The very fact that this amino acid was overlooked for so long suggests that it's direct importance to our lives is negligible; it's relevance is more about filling the final gaps in an overall picture.
In the article [osu.edu], Krzycki suggests that it also alters the way we should approach genetics:
"This shows us that the genetic code, and therefore, evolution is much more plastic than people might have thought."
"I think this work will cause researchers to start looking at genetic sequences that they might have thought at first were simply aberrations," he said. "Instead, they might signal discoveries like ours."
Re:Importance of this discovery? (Score:1)
That is assuming of course that our current picture is accurate. Don't forget that for the most part our understanding in science is not based on absolutely insoluable facts yet simply the available facts at the time.
While this AA may not be a huge player I wouldn't simply dismiss new discoveries based on that line of thinking.
Re:Importance of this discovery? (Score:1)
Perhaps we might finally learn more about body parts that we currently slice out of children if the parts are infected. Perhaps these new aminos hold clues to diseases.
Although we may not know the application now, even the most "insignificant" discovery can change the world.
Re:Importance of this discovery? (Score:2)
Perhaps these new aminos hold clues to diseases.
So far, as I understand it, this 22nd known amino acid has only been found in methanogens although the article [osu.edu] states that:
Krzycki believes it is likely to be found in other situations - in other organisms
Those other organisms have yet to be identified and almost certainly don't include humans. That suggests that this discovery won't have much bearing on diseases that affect humans, unless it's an important factor in the make-up of one of our parasites.
Re:Importance of this discovery? (Score:2)
Your reasoning escapes me.
Finding something that is quite rare in one place generally makes it much simpler to detect in other places. Often you wouldn't have found it before merely because you had no idea as to what you were looking for. (Or at least, you weren't looking for it.) I would expect that there are many small chemicals that occure rarely, but are necessary for the proper functioning of the human body, yet have not been detected.
To pick an example that's a bit old now: Selenium is a poison. It kills animals (and makes plants sick). But without a bit of selenium we die. This was found out only when sheep in Austrailia started getting "milky white disease". Austrailia may be the only area of the world that is low enough in selenium for this disease to reveal itself. We don't need much selenium at all. But the tiny amount that we do need is vital.
Re:Importance of this discovery? (Score:2, Insightful)
However, this is probably a very, very rare occurence and it could be that this only happens in a small subset of organims, meaning that it will have no effect on Humans or most other relevant "model systems"
Nonetheless, this is very cool
Re:Importance of this discovery? (Score:1)
Still, while pyrrolysine may only be relevant to methane-producing bacteria, the similarly stop-codon encoded amino acid selenocysteine is incorporated into a couple of important enzymes like glutathione peroxidase (which keeps your red blood cells from lysing from oxidative damage) and 5'-deiodinase (which is important for regulating the activity of your thyroid hormone). Who knows what role the translation machinery plays in the etiology of diseases like hemolytic anemia, and hyper- or hypo-thyroidism?
Re:Importance of this discovery? (Score:1)
Are you an archaeon? (Score:2)
However, the very related nature of the Archaea to the the eukaryotes like us suggests that it is not completely unlikely that pyrrolysine will be found to occur in small amounts in human proteins. The 21st amino acid, selenocysteine, occurs in only a handful of known human proteins but is extremely important where it occurs.
It's been an exciting few weeks for those of us interested in the Archaea. A few weeks ago, the smallest genome of a known free living organism, whjich happened to be an archaeon, was sequenced, and now this.
Re:Importance of this discovery? (Score:3, Interesting)
Or maybe people already know that. It's already well established that different organisms use different translation tables when synthesizing proteins. The NCBI [nih.gov] lists 17 [nih.gov] such tables in their section on gene transltation. Heck, the human nucleus and mitochondria use different translatation tables! Is it really such a surprise that those differences might occasionally include an additional amino acid?
Re:A reply to Timothy. (Score:2)
Bah. (Score:3, Funny)
And whatever you do, don't let the smoking man get ahold of them, that's how they dissappeared the first time around. And no, he isn't dead. He obviously had the black army/CIA helicopters stage his death. What a drama queen.
I remember that episode (Score:2)
Maybe in X-files land she wasn't just a random scientist, but someone actually in the know. That is why she had to die in that episode; she could have become a major security risk.
Just building new and more creative x-files conspiracy theories.
Re:Bah. (Score:2)
Learn a bit (Score:2, Informative)
There are lots of information sourced from documents at this [qmw.ac.uk] page.
Maybe the discover will revolutionize the way humans feed - should help French vine to be even more flavorful too? :)
Creating *new* bases (Score:5, Informative)
Ah! Here's the original article: Code Breakers [sciencenews.org]. It's definitely worth a read.
Re:Creating *new* bases (Score:1)
of an MIT trick reported in Steven Levy's book HACKERS.
One fine midnight, the hackers snuck into the comptuter room where the first transistor based
computer resided. A few minutes with a soldering iron and the computer had a new opcode.
The DNA scientists were not changing the DNA code so much as they were changing the cell's compiler . The DNA didn't change, only one of its codons were now interpreted as a different amino acid.
Re:Creating *new* bases (Score:1)
Sure, they *thought* they had covered all their bases, but they hadn't.
It's not nice to fool with Mother Nature.
Re:Creating *new* bases (Score:1)
And while the genetic code is pretty universal, mitochondria use a slightly modified version, and according to the article, Salmonella have tRNAs that recognize four bases instead of just three.
Metaphysical Towers (Score:3, Insightful)
Even more so now that researchers are looking for numbers 23 and 24.
Strange stuff indeed. That is the problem with this class of metaphysician. reality intrudes from time to time.
Re:Metaphysical Towers (Score:1)
:)
Infinite number of amino acids (Score:3, Informative)
Nor is it obvious why certain radicals are vital, and most are not. Some of the common radicals are missing in the vital amino acids. Hydrogen and methyl are there, but ethyl, propyl and higher n-alkanes are not. Yet isopropyl, and both 1 & 2-methylpropyl are. Wierd. Perhaps it has something to do with the way exclusionary mechanisms to keep undesirably amino acids out of the protein building machinery.
From an information-theory viewpoint, why are the DNA sequences largely incompressible? Are the three-base pair codons (6 binary digits each) equally probable? Those codons could be decoded into 64 possibilities, yet we have only 22 amino acids. Are some of the codons used for amino acid pairs? Or else we've got alot of missing acids. Untils those codons are themselves decoded (and any bigrams, tridgrams, etc), we should expect surprises. And what of the great expanse of alleged junk? Does nature have a signal-to-noise ratio approaching that of USENET? :)
Re:Infinite number of amino acids (Score:1)
Re:Infinite number of amino acids (Score:1)
And for those who like R and S notation, one is neither, and two are S whereas all the others are R. (Sulphur is a higher precedence than Oxygen).
Re:Infinite number of amino acids (Score:1)
And as for the sulphur, damn those Cahn-Ingold-Prelog precendece rules!
Elgon
Re:Infinite number of amino acids (Score:2)
Nature's is either a little lower or much higher, depending on how much of living matter you consider "signal".
--Blair
"See, here is where having Steven Jay Gould around would help..."
Re:Infinite number of amino acids (Score:2, Interesting)
As for why only certain R groups are found, it's probably ultimately dictated by thermodynamics, with a little input from natural selection. Nature is very conservative with the building blocks it uses, and almost all of the amino acids used can be derived from glucose and its various metabolites. n>2 alkanes R groups would probably require a lot of energy to synthesize, particularly since they're hydrophobic and all these reactions happen in an aqueous environment. If you can't make it from glucose within the thermodynamic constraints of a biological system, you're unlikely to make it.
Probably because of thermodynamics as well, not all codons occur with equal probability. And because of the thermodynamic instability of the third base pair with regards to codons/anti-codons binding, many tRNAs are only specific for the first two bases (a phenomenon known as "wobble")
Because of thermodynamic and steric considerations, it would be difficult for ribosomes to accept dipeptide/tripeptide tRNAs, since the active sites on the enzymes have only so much leeway as to where they expect to physically find the atoms they're supposed to act on. While theoretically an alternate translation system could evolve, given the conservative nature of evolution, it would probably take a long time and require severe selective pressure.
Finally, as for "junk" DNA, a lot of it has been found to serve various structural functions with regards to the integrity of the genome. There are probably very few regions of even heterochromatin that don't have a function, and the sequences that are truly useless now probably had a function in the evolutionary past.
Re:Infinite number of amino acids (Score:4, Insightful)
At the risk of nitpicking, significantly more than 20 or 22 amino acids are found in life, just not as building blocks of proteins. Take for example dopamine, which is an amino acid not used in proteins in any known organism, but a rather common neurotransmitter in most animals.
Re:Infinite number of amino acids (Score:1)
The significance of the whole 22nd amino acid thing is only that it's the 22nd GENETICALLY ENCODABLE amino acid found in nature, and it's in some weird bacteria, not in humans. This means that it has its own tRNA. There are more than 22 amino acids found in proteins, even in humans, and in the lab they've created "alien" bacteria that use two or three completely artificial amino acids to incorporate fluorescent tags into protein molecules and that kind of thing.
Umami - The Taste of Amino Acids (Score:2)
Re:Umami - The Taste of Amino Acids (Score:1)
That's really funny. Umami is a japanese word, meaning approximately "yummy" or "delicious" in english. So now there's sweet, sour, salty, bitter, and "mmmm....".
Re:Umami - The Taste of Amino Acids (Score:2)
The Japs have known about it for a long time - hence MSG.
It's probably more like people are doing more and deeper research into it.
Building blocks (Score:3, Informative)
It's important to remember that amino acids aren't the only building blocks -- cell membranes are made of lipids, cholesterol, and polysaccharides (sugars). There are many possible modifications beyond the amino acid sequence. For instance, immune markers (blood type, etc.) are sugar chains which are tacked onto proteins. Sugars on the surface of viruses help them bind to cells. Another common modification is phosphorylation: addition of phosphate to a protein, which is a common method of activating (or deactivating) proteins.
The body also uses lipid derivatives, steroids, and most importantly vitamins to obtain chemical functions not provided by amino acids (catalysis, cell signaling, etc.)
Re:Building blocks (Score:2, Interesting)
What is remarkable about selenocysteine and pyrrolysine is that they are actually encoded by the genome. This is in contrast to hydroxyproline and hydroxylysine (and gamma-carboxyglutamate, necessary for blood clotting) which are encoded by standard proline, lysine, and glutamate codons. It's not until the peptides are being modified in the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus that the hydroxy- or carboxy- groups are added on.
Re:Building blocks (Score:2)
You can't really claim that they were selected against unless you can demonstrate that they were once more common. They could be emerging.
And, to be a bit nitpicky, you can't really claim that they were selected against unless you can demonstrate that they were what was selected against. Frequently an emergent gene occurs in an animal that for totally separate reasons is unfortunate. I suppose that you could claim that the dinosaurs were selected against, because they weren't immune to being hit on the head with a meteor, but that's hardly fair. And it won't be fair until long after we have taken steps to guard ourselves against the same fate. (Even then, I'm dubious.)
Re:Building blocks (Score:2, Interesting)
Frequency distribution of codons show that some codons are simply more common, and some amino acids can be coded 6 ways (e.g. serine) while there's only one way to code methionine. I suggested selection because the most likely way that this distribution occured was mutation of tRNA's and aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases for uncommon amino acids, which implies genetic selection. There's a raft in literature on genetic evolution I'm not familiar with though (have to admit I got a "C" on my paper about that)
It's possible to substitute synthetic tRNA's in the lab to insert non-standard amino acids -- no reason it's doesn't happen in nature, all it would take is a "mutated" (from the point of view of the codon table in Voet and Voet) aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase to attach a different compound to the tRNA. It would be interesting to study whether this was conserved since the beginning of time or emergence of a new pathway.
Not relevant to humans (Score:1)
Amino acids are encoded from triplets of DNA, called codons. 4^3 equals 64 possible codons. In our cells, there are 64 types of tRNA, each of which binds to a particular codon, and maps to one of 20 amino acids, plus "start" and "stop".
Now if someone found a human cell type which contains an altered tRNA that encodes for a non-standard amino acid, then THAT would be big news for us... e.g. major revisions to Biochemistry 101 texts.
Finally, only 12 of the 20 amino acids in our body are "essential". The other 8 can be synthesized from other similar amino acids. Hence, the combination of beans and rice doesn't necessarily contain all 20 amino acids, but at the very least, it has the 12 essential ones.
It's not about the amino acid, it's about the tRNA (Score:5, Informative)
This case is special not because of the use of a non-standard amino acid, but because it is an *additional* amino acid rather than a replacement. This means that the machinery of translation of an RNA codon to an amino acid (via tRNA) and the construction of the amino acid (via an enzyme) exists in parallel with the machinery for all the other existing amino acids. This is remarkably interesting because it represents a much larger genetic difference in the amino acid translating machinery, and a difference which we have never seen before.
and... (Score:1)
just a thought
BOFH_org
Re: What is an amino acid & where does it come (Score:2)
10 bucks says I know whats in his clipboard
Re: What is an amino acid & where does it come (Score:1)
[snip] Dried bull's spunk?
Seriously though, is slashdot now getting people creating accounts just to plug products, or was this just a coincidence (I suppose geeks get employment from all sorts of companies)?
Re:hehehe, rice and beans give me the winds (Score:1)
Prepared correctly it has a great vitamins/calories ratio for all the important vitamins.
The only description I could find on the web and in English is here [nyu.edu]. I have the original recipe in French in a book by Kousmine (a Swiss doctor that treated Cancer and other degenerative disease with nutrition and lifestyle reforms in conjunction with conventional treatments), if you are interested I can translate the relevant part.