Ammonia

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Ammonia (azan), also known by the trivial name ammonia, is normally a gas with the general formula NH 3 . It is naturally present in the human body and is also a very important substance in the chemical industry.

Physico-chemical properties[edit | edit source]

Structural formula of urea
  • It is toxic (severe exposure can cause poisoning - see below)
  • Colorless, pungent smelly flammable gas st v −33.34 & nbsp; ° C and density 0.86 kg / m 3 </ sup >
  • Ammonia molecules are polar, with a free electron pair on the nitrogen
  • Nitrogen can bind a proton, resulting in the ammonium cation NH 4 + (so it is basic in nature)
  • Well soluble in water and partially reacts with it to form hydroxide and ammonium ions
  • May form significant salts (eg 'salmiak' ') and complexes where the electron pair donor is
  • In nature, it is formed by the decomposition of nitrogenous substances (some microorganisms, such as the genus Azotobacter, bind atmospheric nitrogen and catalyze it to ammonia using the enzyme nitrogenase)

Meaning in the human body[edit | edit source]

Physiological levels of ammonia in peripheral blood are very low (10-20 μg / 100 ml [1]), its' production may increase, for example in metabolic alkalosis (ammonia is involved in the regulation of acid - base balance and the retention of some cations).

File:Glucose-alanine cycle.jpeg
Glucose-alanine cycle

Ammonia is formed by deamination of the α-amino nitrogen contained in amino acids. In the liver, it is rapidly metabolized to urea( urea), which is non-toxic - so it is part of the urea cycle. Urea synthesis is energy intensive - 3 moles of ATP are consumed per 1 mole of urea. In hepatic impairment (eg hepatitis or liver cirrhosis, or in collateral communication between the systemic and portal bloodstreams, ammonia may accumulate in the blood and cause clinical signs typical of its increased concentration. Symptoms of poisoning include '[tremor] tremor], blurred vision, blurred speech, and coma death.

Ammonia can be formed in most tissues, but the urea cycle is only present in the liver. Therefore, it can also be degraded in the "glucose-alanine" cycle, or by the formation of "glutamine".

Bacteria can produce a significant amount of ammonia in the large intestine, which can cause liver coma. This situation usually occurs when eating a protein-rich meal or bleeding into the gastrointestinal tract. In this case, the amount of ammonia produced can be reduced by oral administration of neomycin.


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Reference[edit | edit source]

  1. MURRAY, Robert K, et al. Harper's biochemistry. 2. edition. H&H, 2002. 871 pp. pp. 306-310, 651. ISBN 80-7319-013-3.

Used Literature[edit | edit source]

  • MURRAY, Robert K, et al. Harper's biochemistry. 2. edition. H&H, 2002. 871 pp. pp. 306-310, 651. ISBN 80-7319-013-3.
  • VACÍK, George, et al. Overview of high school chemistry. 42. edition. SPN - pedagogické nakladatelství, 1999. 0 pp. pp. 189-190. ISBN 80-7235-108-7.
  • {Cite

| type = web | surname1 = Zemanová | name1 = Lucie | surname2 = Wsól | name2 = Vladimir | name = Charles University | subtitle = Moodle for teaching | publisher = Charles University | year = 2014 | date_of_revision = June 3, 2014 | cited = 2014-10-07 | url = https://dl1.cuni.cz/enrol/index.php?id=2953 }}