What are vitamins?
A Vitamin is an organic molecule required by a living organism in minute amounts for proper health. An organism deprived of all sources of a particular vitamin will eventually suffer from disease symptoms specific to that vitamin.
Vitamins can be classified as either water soluble, which means they dissolve easily in water, or fat soluble, which means they are absorbed through the intestinal tract with the help of lipids.
In general, an organism must obtain vitamins or their metabolic precursors from outside the body, most often from the organism's diet. Examples of vitamins that the human body can derive from precursors include vitamin A, which can be produced from beta carotene; niacin from the amino acid tryptophan; and vitamin D through exposure of skin to ultraviolet light.
The term vitamin does not encompass other essential nutrients such as dietary minerals, essential fatty acids, or essential amino acids, nor is it used for the large number of other nutrients that merely promote health, but are not strictly essential.
The word vitamin was coined by the Polish biochemist Casimir Funk in 1912. Vita in Latin is life and the -amin suffix is short for amine; at the time it was thought that all vitamins were amines. Though this is now known to be incorrect, the name has stuck.
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Vitamin D: New Perspectives in Drawing
Emma Dexter
Phaidon Press, 2005-12-01
Price: $69.95
Keywords: Abstract Expressionism, Ancient Classical, Art Deco, Art History, Art Nouveau, Art, Arts Photography, Baroque, Byzantine, Constructivism, Contemporary Art, Cubism, Dadaism, Drawing, Fauvism, Folk Art, Futurism, German Expressionism, Gothic, Graphic Design, Impressionism, Instruction Reference, Mannerism, Medieval, Modern, Neoclassical, Pop, Post-Impressionism, Pre-Raphaelite, Prehistoric Primitive, Realism, Renaissance, Rococo, Romanesque, Romantic, Schools, Periods Styles, Surrealism
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