Your body produces this nonessential amino acid on its own, but you can also get D-aspartic acid from foods like beef, nectarines, eggs, and asparagus.
D-ASPARTIC ACID is on the long list of supplements boasting benefits ranging from boosting testosterone levels to improving fertility to beefing up your muscles. But is there any truth to these claims ...
D-Aspartate (D-Asp) is an atypical amino acid increasingly recognised for its pivotal role in reproductive endocrinology. Research has demonstrated that D-Asp acts as a local messenger in the ...
D-Aspartic acid is abundant in the developing brain. We have identified and cloned mammalian aspartate racemase (DR), which converts L-aspartate to D-aspartate and colocalizes with D-aspartate in the ...
Studies have indicated that it boosts testosterone levels, improves fertility, and reduces symptoms of schizophrenia, ...
The amino acids L-glutamate and L-aspartate depolarize H1 horizontal cells in the perfused goldfish retina but only at millimolar concentrations. The effects of L-glutamate (but not of L-aspartate) ...
When it comes to brain proteins, small changes can make a dramatic difference. Researchers studying NMDA ...
Researchers have captured for the first time and in exquisite detail pictures of NMDA receptors in a fully open conformation.