Zwitter Ion: Difference between revisions

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Removed some stray code. Cleaned up the text.
 
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A Zwitterion is formed&nbsp;when an [[Amino acid|amino acid]] is at it's [[Isoelectric point|isoelectric point]].&nbsp;Most Zwitterion's have no net charge and therefore will not migrate in a charged field.&nbsp;This is because they accept a [[Proton|proton]] (H<sup>+</sup>) at&nbsp;their N-terminus and lose a proton at&nbsp;their [[C-terminus|C-terminus]]. However, it is possible for the [[R-group|R-group]] of&nbsp;an amino acid to interact in the same way, which can give the Zwitterion a&nbsp;net charge eg. if the R-group contains a [[Carboxyl_group|carboxyl group]] (COOH) it may also donate the H<sup>+ </sup>from this group, creating a net charge of +1.
A Zwitterion is formed when an [[Amino acid|amino acid]] is at its [[Isoelectric point|isoelectric point]]. Most Zwitterions have no net charge, therefore will not migrate in a charged field. This is because they accept a [[Proton|proton]] (H<sup>+</sup>) at their [[N-terminal|N-terminus]], and lose a proton at their [[C-terminus|C-terminus]]. However, it is possible for the [[R-group|R-group]] of an amino acid to interact in the same way, which can give the Zwitterion a net charge eg. if the R-group contains a [[Carboxyl group|carboxyl group]] (COOH) it may also donate the H<sup>+ </sup> from this group, creating a net charge of +1.

Latest revision as of 16:53, 4 December 2017

A Zwitterion is formed when an amino acid is at its isoelectric point. Most Zwitterions have no net charge, therefore will not migrate in a charged field. This is because they accept a proton (H+) at their N-terminus, and lose a proton at their C-terminus. However, it is possible for the R-group of an amino acid to interact in the same way, which can give the Zwitterion a net charge eg. if the R-group contains a carboxyl group (COOH) it may also donate the H+ from this group, creating a net charge of +1.