If the amino acid is in acidic solution then it will accept protons; that is act as a base.
I know that, but does that include the side chain (z group) as well? (any carboxy and amine groups on that)
The side chain of
glutamic acid is actually ionised (along with the other groups) around pH 4.5 and the zwitterion exists around the pH 3.22 mark (that's the NH3+ and the COO-, side chain COOH).
In reality, yes it should ... but in the VCE course, no idea what you actually have to know (no memorising of amino acid pKa).
Side note. The amino acids with ionisable R groups are glutamic acid, aspartic acid, arginine and lysine. First two having the acidic R group and last two having basic (and ionised at ~pH 11 if you must know). Histidine is another one (side chain ionised ~pH 6, which makes it 0 charge). Histidine is just special because at a lower pH it can have a +2 form. Refuse.. to use.. "Z".
So you're probably thinking, who cares bro what about our exam?! In a sense this is a bit over the top for VCE because all I remember learning was the 'general' ionisation of the amino acid parts without all these R group exceptions
^see kyzoo's post. I think it's something for someone to confirm with their chemistry teacher in case VCAA decides to dick you all with glutamate.
And for the amine group (on the Z group) in asparagine?
It's an amide. That side chain is actually considered neutral.