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Amino Acid supplementation: Chemistry Question Options
 
Karnov
#1 Posted : 9/1/2013 5:19:00 PM

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I can't post this in the correct subforum yet, so I will post it here.

If you take amino acids as a supplement (let's say 5 different amino acids, each ordered as bulk powder) and you mix in water to drink as a solution, this solution is nasty acidic and nasty flavored (god, tell me about it) and not great for dental health.

My question: can you basify amino acids in an aqueous solution with simple baking soda without affecting their benefits on ingestion?

Thanks for any insights. Wink

Note: Normally I'd encapsulate them, but sometimes I run out of time and take them in powdered form.
 

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benzyme
#2 Posted : 9/1/2013 6:00:52 PM

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nope.

amino acids are formulated for physiological pH. you start messing with pH, then you change the charge state of the terminal groups (carboxyl/amine), and/or the side groups.

most amino acids are zwitterions, not acidic. their net charge is 0.
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Karnov
#3 Posted : 9/1/2013 6:07:27 PM

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So, things like Alpha Lipoic Acid or N-Acetyl Cysteine, if those mix with a water/baking soda solution, their properties change?

Sorry: not sure if NAC is an amino but is a nutritional supplement.
 
 
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