30AA
30aa is a term that does not point to a single, widely recognized object. In biology, the suffix aa is commonly used as an abbreviation for amino acids, so 30aa is often read as thirty amino acids. In this sense, 30aa typically denotes a short peptide or a protein fragment of thirty residues. Such fragments are common in research as probes, epitopes, or building blocks in peptide libraries. A 30-amino-acid peptide can be synthesized chemically or produced by translation and then purified. The properties of a 30aa sequence depend on its amino acid composition; it may adopt a defined structure, remain unstructured, or act as an epitope for antibody recognition. In experiments, 30aa sequences are used to study binding motifs, to map regions of proteins, and to explore motifs that drive secondary structure formation. Synthesis of 30aa peptides often uses solid-phase synthesis, and analysis typically involves mass spectrometry and high-performance liquid chromatography to confirm sequence and purity.
In other contexts, 30aa (often written 30AA) can serve as a catalog number, model code, or dataset