¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Alanines
1. alanine [n] - See also: alanine
Lexicographical Neighbors of Alanines
Literary usage of Alanines
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Fownes Manual of Chemistry, Theoretical and Practical: A New American from by George Fownes (1885)
"They are also designated, as a group, by the name alanines . ... The alanines
are crystalline bodies, mostly having a sweetish taste, easily soluble in ..."
2. Enzymes by Otto Cohnheim (1912)
"... phenylalanine are substituted alanines, and a-alanines. Tyrosine, phenylalanine,
and all investigated compounds which are substituted at the aC-atom, ..."
3. Text-book of chemistry: Inorganic and Organic, with Toxicology; for Students by Rudolph August Witthaus (1919)
"Nitrous acid converts the two alanines into the corresponding lactic acids.
Amido-butyric Acids — CH^NO,—and Amido-valeric acids ..."
4. A Dictionary of Applied Chemistry by Thomas Edward Thorpe (1921)
"[a]D-37'3° in alkaline solution), by crystallisation of the brucino salt, and
these yield on hydrolysis the corresponding optically active alanines ..."
5. The Vegetable Alkaloids: With Particular Reference to Their Chemical by Amé Pictet (1904)
"From the inactive form may be derived the active alanines (melting-point 297°).
These show only a weak rotatory power, which in acid solution, however, ..."
6. Chemistry of the Carbon Compounds: Or, Organic Chemistry by Victor von Richter (1891)
"... amido- acids occur already formed in animal organisms. Great physio- logical
importance attaches to them here. They have received the name alanines or ..."