Encyclopedia > Homocysteine

  Article Content

Homocysteine

The metabolic intermediate homocysteine is an amino acid created by the single carbon chemistry of S-adenosyl-methionine[?]. It can be reconstituted back to methionine, or converted to cysteine or taurine via the transsulfuration pathway[?].

Note: need homocysteine structure about here.

Homocysteine is attracting attention because high levels of blood serum homocysteine are now considered to be markers of potential heart problems. Note that, as a consequence of the chemistry that homocysteine is involved in, that deficiencies of folic acid, or pyridoxine (B-6), or cobalamin (B-12) can lead to high homocysteine levels. A current area of research is whether high serum homocysteine itself is a problem in higher concentrations, or merely an indicator of extant problems.

Although homocysteine can be converted back to methionine, there is no indication that dietary homocysteine contributes any homocysteine nutritionally to humans.


Further Information
Methionine and Homocysteine
http://www.thorne.com/altmedrev/fulltext/meth1-4
Structure, Properties, and metabolism of Homocysteine
http://www.diabetesforum.net/cgi-bin/display_engine.pl?category_id=8&content_id=232



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Bullying

... power, from the Greek language turannos. In Classical Antiquity[?] it did not always have inherently negative implications, it merely designated anyone who assumed ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 23.1 ms