Essential Amino Acids
by Henri Roca, MD, Clinical Functional Medicine Specialist
The body utilizes 20 amino acids to produce its various tissues and molecules. The essential amino acids must come from the diet. The body cannot synthesize these amino acids.
The non-essential amino acids can be produced by the body from other protein building blocks. Those amino acids marked by an asterisk are conditionally essential amino acids. These amino acids must be supplemented via a nutritional source if the body is under stress (illness, intense physical training, mental/emotional stress, genetic inefficiency) because the body cannot keep up its production due to excess demand.
During times of stress, illness, poor gut function, or poor nutrition, an amino acid deficiency can occur. Symptoms of an amino acid deficiency can include: fatigue, loss of muscle mass, memory loss, inability to learn new information, oversleeping, food cravings, depressed mood, trouble focusing, slow illness recovery, poor tissue repair, hormone imbalance, and poor detoxification. If you develop an amino acid deficiency, you may need to take a broad amino acid supplement.
Amino acids are broken down from proteins in our diet by a properly functioning digestive system. Foods high in proteins are usually sufficient to give us our necessary amount of amino acids.
Foods that contain all nine essential amino acids are called complete proteins. These include: beef, poultry, fish, eggs, dairy, soy, quinoa, and buckwheat. Remember to buy meats that are grass-fed, free-range, antibiotic-free and are raised as locally as possible.
Essential Amino Acids: Food Sources
Histidine: Meat, fish, poultry, nuts, seeds, whole grains, quinoa
Isoleucine: Meat, fish, poultry, eggs, lentils, nuts, seeds
Leucine: Brown rice, dairy, soy, beans, legumes, quinoa
Lysine: Pork, codfish, eggs, yogurt, cheese, soy, spirulina
Methionine: Eggs, meat fish, sesame seeds, brazil nuts, cereal grains, quinoa
Phenylalanine: Milk, eggs, cheese, nuts, soybeans, chicken, beef, pork, beans, fish
Threonine: Lean beef, lamb, pork, collagen, gelatin, cheese
Tryptophan: Eggs, cheese, pineapple, nuts, seeds, turkey, whole milk, tuna, oats
Valine: Soy cheese, peanuts, mushrooms, whole grains, vegetables, quinoa
Nonessential Amino Acids
Alanine
Arginine*
Aspartate
Cysteine*
Glutamate
Glutamine*
Glycine*
Proline*
Serine*
Tyrosine*
Asparagine*
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