Tripeptide

A tripeptide is a peptide derived from three amino acids joined by two or sometimes three peptide bonds.[1] As for proteins, the function of peptides is determined by the consistuent amino acids and their sequence. The simplest tripeptide is glycylglycylglycine. In terms of scientific investigations, the dominant tripeptide is glutathione (γ-L-Glutamyl-L-cysteinylglycine), which serves many roles in many forms of life.[2]

A tripeptide (example Val-Gly-Ala) with
green marked amino end (L-Valine) and
blue marked carboxyl end (L-Alanine)

Examples

gollark: And lets them be recategorised and renamed for purposes.
gollark: The protocol also allows them to declare arbitrary buttons/text/inputs to the web interface.
gollark: How recently?
gollark: uqb is clearly not aware of how heavdronic heavdrones are.
gollark: Or cheaper ESP32 heavdrones.

See also

References

  1. Nelson, David L.; Cox, Michael M. (2005), Principles of Biochemistry (4th ed.), New York: W. H. Freeman, ISBN 0-7167-4339-6
  2. Guoyao Wu, Yun-Zhong Fang, Sheng Yang, Joanne R. Lupton, Nancy D. Turner (2004). "Glutathione Metabolism and its Implications for Health". Journal of Nutrition. 134: 489-492. doi:10.1093/jn/134.3.489.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)


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