BIOLOGY LiBRARr 6 THE PHYSIOLOGY OF THE AMINO ACIDS Courtesy of Prof . L. B. Mendel THE PHYSIOLOGY OF THE AMINO ACID UERHII mi <>y/J nsav/Jod tejntnoo srfj worfa H bfi£ A >Bd ,e ([ioiilw'1o sno.s^B ^rid ,ii '^ ^MtBtgB3 i ,H ,JBI bsiajf. . A and B show the contrast between two rats of the same age, one of which, B, has been stunted. The lower two pictures afford a comparison between two rats of the same weight, but widely differing in age. The older, stunted rat, B, has not lost the characteristic proportions of the younger animal, C. THE PHYSIOLOGY OF THE AMINO ACIDS ' BY FRANK P. UNDERBILL, Pn.D. »* Professor of Pathological Chemistry, Tale University NEW HAVEN: YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS LONDON: HUMPHREY MILFORD OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS MDCCCCXV U5 COPYRIGHT, 1915 BY YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS =Fir&t printed, Npyenjbeiv 1915, 1000 copies PREFACE During the past few years the physiology of the amino acids has been subjected to much experimenta- tion with the result that these protein cleavage prod- ucts have assumed an ever increasing importance in the problems associated with nitrogenous metabolism. Owing largely to our too recent appreciation of the significance of these substances in metabolic processes there exists at present no compilation which fur- nishes an adequate conception of the roles which may be played by the amino acids. It has been, therefore, the aim of the writer to gather together in one place the results which have thus far been obtained in the field of the biochemistry of the amino acids, thus affording the busy practitioner, and others whose resources for consulting original communications are limited, an opportunity of gaining a knowledge of the present-day problems in this field of nutrition. In the accomplishment of this purpose the writer has made no effort to include all the details or all the literature available upon a given topic, but has sought rather to indicate leading lines of thought. At the end of each chapter are given references in which all the impor- tant literature upon the topic discussed is cited. It is assumed that the reader is familiar with the fundamental principles of metabolism, hence, in gen- eral, these have been omitted. The author is deeply indebted to Professor Lafay- ette B. Mendel for suggestions, criticisms of the manuscript and for some of the plates presented. 331145 CONTENTS Chapter I. PAGE The Proteins and their Derivatives, the Amino Acids 1 Chapter II. Digestion, and Bacterial Activity in Relation to the Amino Acids ..... 28 Chapter III. The Absorption of Proteins and Amino Acids 46 Chapter IV. In What Form Does Ingested Protein Enter the Circulation? ..... 58 Chapter V. Theories of Protein Metabolism ... 81 Chapter VI. The Further Fate of Amino Acids . . 99 Chapter VII. The Amino Acids in Relation to the Specific Dynamic Action of Proteins . . .120 Chapter VIII. The Amino Acids and Simpler Nitrogenous Compounds as Foodstuffs . . . 126 Chapter IX. The Specific Role of Amino Acids in Nutrition and Growth 136 Index 159 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS Plate. Photograph of mice . . Frontispiece PAGE Figure 1. Survival periods of mice on diet of zein and tyrosine and zein and tryptophane .... 140 Figure 2. Growth curve of normal white rats 144 Figure 3. Growth curve with casein and milk diets 144 Figure 4. Growth curve with milk diet . . 145 Figure 5. Maintenance on casein and growth after addition of protein-free milk 146 Figure 6. Resumption of growth after addi- tion of protein-free milk to casein diet 147 Figure 7. Failure of growth on gliadin plus protein-free milk . . . 149 Figure 8. Recovery of the capacity to grow after a period of stunting . . 150 Figure 9. Maintenance and fertility on a gliadin diet . . . .151 Figure 10. Indispensability of lysine for growth 153 Figure 11. Failure of zein to maintain or pro- mote growth .... 154 Figure 12. Indispensability of tryptophane for maintenance in nutrition . .156 Figure 13. Growth on diets containing zein + tryptophane + lysine . .157 THE PHYSIOLOGY OF THE AMINO ACIDS CHAPTER I THE PROTEINS AND THEIR DERIVATIVES— THE AMINO ACIDS THE PROTEINS The presence of nitrogen as a fundamental con- stituent of protoplasm attests the supreme importance of this element for the construction of living matter and the continued existence of organized life. It is well recognized, however, that all forms of nitrogen are not equally available for the maintenance of physiological rhythm. In support of this may be cited the fact that although the animal organism is con- tinually surrounded by an atmosphere rich in nitrogen, little or none of this nitrogen can be utilized by the body for nutritional purposes. The organism pos- sesses discriminating powers and demands nitrogen in a specific form, namely, such as that peculiar to protein and its derivatives. Protein material con- stitutes therefore an essential foodstuff and without it life would be impossible for any considerable period of time. "It is the chemical nucleus or pivot around which revolves a multitude of reactions characteristic of biological phenomena." 2 t THE AMINO ACIDS Vi'eWed 'from the chemical standpoint protein is seen ajs; a ihrige molecule, complex in structure, labile in character and therefore prone to chemical change. So large and intricate is the make-up of the molecule that chemists for generations have been baffled in their attempts to gain any adequate conception of its nature. At the present stage of our knowledge it is impossible to form any satisfactory definition of a protein based either on its chemical or physiological properties. In general, proteins contain about 15 to 19 per cent of nitrogen, 52 per cent of carbon, 7 per cent of hydrogen, 23 per cent of oxygen and 0.5-2.0 per cent of sulphur. Some also contain phosphorus or iron. They act like amphoteric electrolytes, that is, they are capable of forming salts with both acids and bases. Proteins belong to that class of substances known as colloids and as such do not possess the power to pass through animal or vegetable mem- branes. In a manner similar to colloids they may be separated from their solutions by suitable treatment with salts, such as sodium chloride, ammonium sul- phate, etc. By a process known as "coagulation," which may be induced by the action of heat or the long continued influence of alcohol the proteins lose their colloidal characteristics which cannot be restored. Many proteins are capable of crystallization and indeed may occur in nature in crystalline form. It has been found possible also to cause some to crys- tallize although their presence in nature as crystals is unknown. Some doubt has been cast upon the THE PROTEINS 3 probability of proteins, as we differentiate them at present, being chemical units, but since many of the crystalline plant proteins show a constancy of proper- ties and ultimate composition there is little reason for the assumption that these at least are mixtures of two or more individuals. Concerning the size of the protein molecule some idea may be gained when it is recalled that the molec- ular weight has been calculated to be approximately 15,000. The proteins possess the property of turning the plane of polarized light to the left, the degree of rota- tion for an individual protein varying with the solvent employed. CLASSIFICATION OF PROTEINS At present proteins are classified according to their physical properties, as, for example, their solubility in pure water, weak salt solutions and dilute acids and alkalies. It is well recognized that such a classifi- cation is far from ideal, but it is the most satisfactory plan that has been offered. When more complete knowledge is gained concerning the chemical make-up of the protein molecule a classification will undoubt- edly be framed which will be based upon the presence or proportion of certain chemical groups in the differ- ent proteins. All albuminous substances may be divided into 4 THE AMINO ACIDS three large groups, namely, the Simple Proteins, the Conjugated Proteins and the Derived Proteins. Simple Proteins may be defined as substances which yield only a-amino acids or their derivatives on hydrol- ysis. Conjugated Proteins are substances which con- tain the protein molecule united to some other mole- cule or molecules otherwise than as a salt. As their name implies, the Derived Proteins are substances that have been formed from naturally occurring proteins. The various sub-divisions of these large groups, as adopted by the American Physiological Society and the American Society of Biological Chemists, follow: Simple Proteins Conjugated Proteins 1. Albumins. 1. Nucleoproteins. 2. Globulins. 2. Glucoproteins. 3. Glutelins. 3. Phosphoproteins. 4. Alcohol-Soluble Proteins. 4. Hemoglobins. 5. Albuminoids. 5. Lecithoproteins. 6. Histones. 7. Protamines. Derived Proteins A. Primary B. Secondary Protein Derivatives. Protein Derivatives. 1. Proteans. 1. Proteoses. 2. Metaproteins. 2. Peptones. 3. Coagulated Proteins. 3. Peptides. THE PROTEINS 5 OCCURRENCE AND CHARACTERISTICS OF DIFFERENT CLASSES OF PROTEINS A. Simple Proteins Albumins are simple proteins that are soluble in pure water and are coagulable by heat. Globulins, on the other hand, are insoluble in pure water but are readily soluble in dilute salt solutions. Albumins and globulins are generally found together in nature occurring, for example, in large quantity in the blood serum, white of egg, in the substance of cells in gen- eral, and in various seeds. Egg white may be divided into two parts by dialysis against distilled water — the globulin being precipitated owing to the diffusion of the salts from the solution which originally were present in quantity sufficient to hold the globulin in solution. Glutelins are simple proteins insoluble in all neu- tral solvents but easily soluble in very dilute acids and alkalies. Alcohol-Soluble Proteins are simple proteins readily soluble in relatively strong alcohol (70 to 80 per cent), but are insoluble in water, absolute alco- hol and other neutral solvents. These two groups of proteins occur together as constituents of the cereal grains. Glutenin and Gliadin, respectively, from wheat, are the best known examples of these two groups. They constitute the gluten of flour. The elasticity and strength of the gluten, and therefore the 6 THE AMINO ACIDS baking qualities of a flour are influenced by the pro- portions of glutenin and gliadin. Albuminoids may be defined as simple proteins which possess essentially the same chemical compo- sition as the other proteins, but are characterized by great insolubility in all neutral solvents. Examples of this group may be found as the organic basis of bone (ossein), of tendon (collagen and its hydration product, gelatin), of ligament (elastin) and of nails, hairs, horns, hoofs, and feathers (keratins). Histones are basic proteins which may be looked upon as standing between protamines and the more complex proteins. They are precipitated by other proteins and yield a coagulum on heating which is readily soluble in very dilute acids. The histones are soluble in water but insoluble in ammonia. They have been isolated from varied sources, as globin from hemoglobin, scombron from spermatozoa of the mack- erel, gaduhiston from the codfish and arbacin from the sea-urchin. Protqnines are the simplest natural proteins. They are soluble in water, are not coagulable by heat, have the property of precipitating other proteins from their solutions, are strongly basic and form stable salts with strong mineral acids. Examples of protamines are salmin (from the spermatozoa of the salmon), sturin (from the sturgeon), clupein (from the herring), and scombin (from the mackerel). THE PROTEINS 7 B. Conjugated Proteins Nucleoproteins are compounds of one or more protein molecules united with nucleic acid. The nucleoproteins, as their name implies, are the proteins of cell nuclei and give to the latter their character. The nucleoproteins are therefore found in largest quantity wherever cellular material is abundant, as in glandular tissues and organs. By artificial hydroly- sis or during treatment in the alimentary tract a nucleo- protein is decomposed into protein and nucleic acid. Nucleic acid, of which there are several types, may be made to yield a series of well-defined compounds, the purine bases (xanthine, hypoxanthine, adenine and guanine), the pyrimidine bases (uracile, cytosine and thymine), a carbohydrate group (pentose or hexose) and phosphoric acid. Gluco proteins are compounds of the protein mole- cule with a substance or substances containing a car- bohydrate group other than a nucleic acid, Particu- larly rich in glucoproteins are the mucus-yielding portions of tissues. They serve also as a cement sub- stance in holding together the fibers in tendons and ligaments. An ammo-sugar, glucosamine, has been isolated from some of the glucoproteins and it is gen- erally regarded as constituting the carbohydrate radicle of these conjugated proteins. Phosphoproteins are compounds of the protein molecule with some, as yet undefined, phosphorus- containing, group other than a nucleic acid or lecithin. 8 THE AMINO ACIDS Conspicuous foods containing phosphoproteins are milk with its caseinogen and egg yolk with its vitellin. A trace of iron is also evident in these proteins and although it is possibly present as an impurity there is no evidence that it does not exist in combination with the protein. Hemoglobins are compounds of the protein mole- cule with hematin or some similar substance. The coloring matter of the blood is hemoglobin which acts as oxygen carrier for the tissues and is charac- terized by holding iron as a constituent part in organic combination. Globin is the protein portion of hemo- globin. In certain of the lower animal forms copper enters into combination with protein forming haemo- cyanin imparting a blue color to the blood. Lecitho proteins are compounds of the protein mole- cule with lecithins. Lecithins are complexes charac- terized by yielding glycerol, phosphoric acid, fatty acid radicles, and a nitrogenous base, choline. The lecithins are present in all plant and animal cells but are especially abundant in the nervous tissues. They belong to the group of essential cell constituents. C. Derived Proteins Certain of the native soluble proteins upon con- tinued contact with water, or the influence of enzymes or acid change their character and become insoluble. Such insoluble substances are called proteans. After repeated reprecipitation globulins may become insolu- THE PROTEINS 9 ble, that is, they are changed to proteans, and it is believed by some protein investigators that nearly every protein may assume a protean state. The metaproteins may be formed from simple protein by the action of acids and alkalies. In this instance, however, the change is undoubtedly more profound than in the case of the proteans. Formerly, metaproteins were termed albuminates, that formed by acid being called acid albuminate, that from the action of alkali being designated alkali albuminate. These substances are insoluble in neutral fluids but are readily soluble in an excess of acid or alkali. The metaproteins are of interest when it is recalled that the acid metaprotein arises as the first step in gastric digestion of protein and that likewise alkali meta- protein may be formed during pancreatic digestion. The coagulated proteins can be produced from simple proteins by the long continued action of alco- hol, stirring or shaking of their solutions, or by the influence of heat. In one instance, namely, the trans- formation of fibrinogen into fibrin in shed blood, the process has long been assumed to be induced by an enzyme. More recent work, however, tends to show that enzyme action is not concerned in the reaction. The class of derived proteins called Secondary Protein Derivatives represent a more profound change from simple proteins than is true for the proteans, metaproteins and coagulated proteins which are grouped together as Primary Protein Derivatives. Of the secondary protein derivatives the proteases 10 THE AMINO ACIDS and peptones are characterized chiefly by their greater solubility and by the fact that, unlike most other pro- teins, they are diffusible through suitable membranes. They represent stages in gastric, pancreatic and bac- terial digestions of protein and the peptones are regarded as products of greater cleavage than the proteoses. There are several proteoses, as protopro- teose, heteroproteose and deuteroproteose and prob- ably there may be several types of peptones. The proteoses are distinguished from the peptones prin- cipally in being precipitated from solutions by satura- tion with ammonium or zinc sulphate. The peptides are "definitely characterized combina- tions of two or more amino acids, the carboxyl (COOH) group of one being united with the amino (NH2) group of the other with the elimination of a molecule of water." For example, if two molecules of glycocoll (glycine) — amino-acetic acid — are con- densed, a peptide, glycyl-glycine, will result. Thus — NHH NHa CH,.CO OH NH H CHa.CO.NH CHa.COOH CH9 . COOH glycyl-glycine . The peptides are designated di-tri-tetra-peptides, etc., according to the number of amino acids in combina- tion. The name polypeptides is also applied to these THE PROTEINS 11 substances. It is usually accepted at the present time that the peptones are relatively simple polypeptides, the line of demarcation between a simple peptone and a complex peptide not being well defined. THE AMINO ACIDS For nearly a century chemists have been seeking to establish the composition and structure of the pro- tein molecule. Progress, which was slow and irregular in the earlier decades of this period, has taken rapid strides in the last twenty years, more intimate knowl- edge of the problem being gained during this inter- val than in all previous time. The investigation has been pursued in three directions — first the demolition of the molecule and the subsequent identification of the resulting fragments; second, the determination of the quantitative relationships of these fragments ; and finally, attempts to unite the disintegration products in such a manner as to reproduce the original molecule. After a considerable period of investigation it was established that, although the protein molecule may yield different types of substances according to the character of the means employed for disrupting it thus indicating a variety of possible lines of cleavage, hydrolysis furnishes the most promising types of units. Latterly, this type of chemical reaction has been employed exclusively and it has yielded the important information now available concerning the nature of the protein decomposition products. Each 12 THE AMINO ACIDS protein investigated by this method was found to yield relatively large molecules, such as proteoses and peptones, and on further disintegration a series of comparatively simple nitrogenous substances of low molecular weight which belong to a definite group of chemical compounds — namely, the amino acids. An amino acid may be regarded as an organic acid in which one hydrogen is replaced by the amino group (NH2), or viewed from another standpoint, an amino acid may be considered as a substituted am- monia, one hydrogen of ammonia, NH3, being replaced by an organic acid. A description of the amino acids yielded by proteins follows. Glycocoll or glycine, amino-acetic acid. CH2. < rnnw is the simplest of the products obtained from pro- tein by hydrolytic cleavage and it was also the first to be discovered. Its separation dates back to 1820 in which year Braconnot obtained the substance by boiling gelatin with sulphuric acid, and because of its sweet taste called it sugar of gelatin. About twenty-five years later Dessaignes isolated it after a hydrolysis of hippuric acid. It was shown by Strecher in 1848 that glycocholic acid, then called cholic acid, consists of a combination of cholalic acid and glycocoll, and in consequence of its being a constituent of a bile acid, glyco- coll assumed a position of some physiological importance. Its presence in various types of albuminoids, such as elastin, etc., was later demonstrated and finally it was shown to be a decomposition product of globulin. Glycocoll is not present in all proteins for albumin, casein, and hemoglobin fail to yield it, and from the vegetable proteins it is obtained in small quantities only. On the other hand, albuminoids are particularly rich in glycocoll. In an extract of the mollusc THE PROTEINS 13 Pecten irradians Chittenden found glycocoll in a free state; and it has been reported as occurring in the urine under vari- ous pathological conditions. After administration of benzoic acid to man and animals hippuric acid (benzoyl-glycocoll) is found in the urine — thus demonstrating a synthesis of hip- puric acid from benzoic acid and glycocoll. J> Alanine — a-amino-propionic acid. CHa.CH < was prepared synthetically previous to its isolation from among the protein decomposition products and was named by its discoverer, Strecher. Alanine has been shown to be a constant decomposition product of proteins. Valine — a.-amino-isovalerianic acid. >CH.CH< In 1856 v. Gorup-Besanez isolated a substance having the formula CsHnNC^ from pancreas and because it possessed properties similar to leucine he looked upon it as a homologue of leucine and called it butalanine. Although a similar sub- stance was isolated from certain seedlings by Schulze and Barbieri, and from the protamine, clupeine, by Kossel, it was not until 1906 that its identity was established by Fischer who gave it the name of valine. Valine is obtained from most proteins. Leucine. a-amino-isobutylacetic acid. CHSCH CH CH^NHi CH3> This amino acid was not described as a protein constituent until 1903 when it was isolated as a decomposition product of fibrin and other proteins by F. Ehrlich. Norleucine. a-amino-normal-caproic acid. CHs.CEb. CH2.CH2.CH.NH2.COOH. From the leucine fraction of the decomposition of the proteins of nervous tissue this amino acid has recently been isolated by Abderhalden and Weil. It is probable that other proteins may yield it also. Phenylalanine -. /3-phenyl-a-amino-propionic acid. '•-COOH Although it had been recognized for many years that a substance having the composition of CgHnNC^ could be ob- tained by cleavage of both animal and vegetable proteins, -it was Fischer who first proved the presence of phenylalanine as a protein derivative. In those proteins lacking tyrosine, as gelatin, for example, the aromatic ring is supplied by phenyla- lanine. Tyrosine. /3-para-oxyphenyl-a-amino-propionic acid. HO.CeH,CH,CH<^£H In 1846 Liebig isolated from a decomposition of cheese a substance possessing the property of crystallizing in silky needles. He named it tyrosine. Since then tyrosine has been regarded as a protein cleavage product. It was not until 1882, THE PROTEINS 15 however, that the structure of tyrosine was positively deter- mined. Tyrosine is absent from the gelatine molecule. In acute yellow atrophy of the liver and in phosphorus poisoning it is claimed that tyrosine may be present as a urinary con- stituent. Serine /3-hydroxy-a-amino-propionic acid. Cramer found serine among the decomposition products of sericin (silk gelatin), and it was not obtained again until 1902 when Fischer isolated it from various proteins as a result of hydrolysis. He also definitely established its structure. Cystine. di-cysteine or di-/3-thio-a-amino-propionic acid. HOOC.CH.NH2.CH2.S— S.CH2.CH.NH2.COOH. Cystine has been known since 1810 having been first de- scribed by Wollaston who separated it from a urinary calculus and called it cystic oxide. From that period, although cystine was repeatedly isolated from various organs of the body, as the liver and kidney, its presence as a regular decomposition product of protein was not established until 1899 when K. A. H. Morner obtained it by a hydrolysis of horn. Bau- mann demonstrated the relationship of cysteine to cystine and thus revealed the structure of cystine. Cysteine and cystine bear the same relation to one another as does a mercaptan to a disulphide, thus, CH2.SH CH2 - S - - S '— - CH2 CH.NH2 CH.NH2 * CH.NHa COOH COOH COOH cysteine cystine Cystine is of considerable importance in metabolism inasmuch as it is the only known sulphur-containing amino acid in the protein molecule. 16 THE AMINO ACIDS Aspartic Acid — Amino-succinic acid. CH2.COOH CH.NH2.COOH Asparagine, the amide of aspartic acid, has been known since 1806, having been isolated from asparagus juice by Robiquet and Vanquelin. Upon boiling asparagine with lead hydroxide Plisson in 1827 obtained aspartic acid. In 1868 aspartic acid was shown by Ritthausen to be present as a product of hydro- lytic cleavage of vegetable proteins. In a similar manner Kreussler obtained it upon hydrolysis of animal proteins and in 1874 it was isolated by Radziejeioski and Salkowski from a tryptic digestion of protein. Its structure was established in 1887. Glutamic Acid (Glutaminic Acid) a-amino-glutaric acid. %*4fc*a CH2.< CH2 .COOH ,NH2.COOH Although glutamic acid was first separated from a hydrol- ysis of wheat gluten in 1866 by Ritthausen its structure was not shown until 1890. Ritthausen demonstrated that it was an amino acid and from this fact together with its origin from gluten gave it the name of glutaminic acid. Glutamic acid was later shown to arise from hydrolytic cleavage of proteins of animal origin as well as from those derived from the vege- table kingdom. Lysine. a-, e,-diamino-caproic acid. . H2N.CH2.CH2.CH2.CH2.CH.NH2.COOH. Lysine is widely distributed as a protein constituent. It was first isolated from casein by Drechsel in 1889. Ellinger THE PROTEINS 17 first demonstrated its structure in 1900 by obtaining cadav- erine from it by putrefaction. Arginine. a-amino-5-guanidme-valerianic acid. NH2 HN = C — NH.CH2.CH2.CH2.CH.NH2.COOH. Among the products of a decomposition of casein Drechsel found a substance which he called lysatinine. Later, in 1894, Hedin demonstrated that this product was in reality a mix- ture of lysine and arginine. Arginine had been obtained pre- viously by E. Schulze and Steiger from the seedlings of various plants. Urea and ornithine are among its decomposi- tion products. Histidine. /3-imidazole-a-amino-propionic acid. .CH NH .CH2.CH.NH2.COOH Histidine was discovered by Kossel in 1896 among the de- composition products of the protamine of sturgeon testes. From the fact that histidine, arginine, and lysine each contain six carbon atoms Kossel called these three substances the hexone bases, and they were regarded as a very important portion of the protein molecule. It was not until 1904 when the structure of histidine was shown by Pauly and Wind- haus and Knopp that it was recognized to belong to a group of compounds entirely different from that including arginine and lysine. Proline. a-pyrrolidine-carboxylic acid. CHg CH2 CH2 CH.COOH y 18 THE AMINO ACIDS Proline was first isolated by Fischer from casein. Its pres- ence in various other proteins was soon shown. Oxyproline. This amino acid was prepared from gelatin in 1902 by Fischer. Its structure is not yet definitely established although it undoubtedly possesses one of the following formulas. HO.CH - CH2 CH2 - CH.OH II II CH2 CH.COOH or CH2 CH.COOH Tryptophane. /3-indole-a-amino-propionic acid. C.CH2.CH.NH2.COOH /CH It was shown in 1826 by Tiedemann and Gmelin that when chlorine or bromine water is added to a tryptic digestion mixture a violet color is produced. Stadelmann named the substance giving this reaction proteinochromogen and Neu- meister proved that any severe treatment of protein would cause the production of this compound to which he gave the name tryptophane. Hopkins and Cole in 1902 isolated from a tryptic digestion of casein a substance which gave all the reactions of tryptophane, namely, the violet coloration with bromine or chlorine, the Adamkiewicz reaction, and the pro- duction of indole and skatole as a result of putrefaction. In this manner the origin of the substances characteristic of putrefaction was made clear. The structure of tryptophane was regarded by Nencki as indole amino acetic acid. Ellinger, however, showed it to be an indole amino propionic acid. Caseinic Acid, or diamino-trioxy-dodecanic acid. This compound has been isolated by Skraup from casein only. Its structure is still unknown. THE PROTEINS 19 On inspection of these formulas it may be estab- lished that certain of the ammo acids are very closely related; thus, glycocoll, the simplest of all, by intro- duction of the group (CH3) becomes alanine. This substance possesses interest because several of the amino acids may be regarded as alanine derivatives. By the replacement of an (OH) group alanine be- comes serine, or by substitution of an (SH) group alanine is changed to cysteine. If the phenyl group (C6H5) is introduced phenylalanine is obtained, and the additional substitution of an (OH) group leads to tyrosine. CH, CH3.OH CHa.SH CH.NHa CH.NH3 CH.NH, COOH COOH COOH Alanine Serine Cysteine CH.NHa COOH Phenylalanine CHa.C6H4.OH CH.NHa COOH Tyrosine The introduction of the indole or iminazole group leads to the formation of tryptophane or histidine respectively. 20 THE AMINO ACIDS CH3 I CH.NH9 I COOH Alanine CH9 CH \ CH.NHa I COOH NH Tryptophane CH x\ C CH I! I C CH CH CH— NH x CH2— C - W CH.NH2 COOH Histidine Again valine, leucine and isoleucine are closely re- lated structurally as may be seen from the formulas following. CH3 CH3 CH3 CH8 CH.NH2 1 COOH CH2 CH.NH2 COOH CH.NH, COOH Valine Leucine Isoleucine THE PROTEINS 21 Viewed from another standpoint the amino acids may be divided into mono-amino acids, — glycocoll, alanine, valine, leucine, isoleucine, phenylalanine, tyro- sine, serine, aspartic acid, and glutamic acid, — each containing, as the name implies a single amino (NH2) group — diamino acids, containing two amino groups, as arginine, and lysine and finally the heterocyclic com- pounds as histidine, proline, oxyproline, and trypto- phane. THE QUANTITATIVE RELATIONSHIPS OF AMINO ACIDS IN PROTEINS The most serious obstacle to the quantitative estima- tion of amino acids in hydrolysis mixtures has been that of inadequate methods of separation. By means of the ester method of E. Fischer this difficulty has been obviated in large measure. In Table I below are presented figures showing the yield of individual amino acids obtained by various investigators from repre- sentative simple proteins. The figures have not all been derived from use of the most exact methods of isolation, hence it is probable that they may not repre- sent maximal values or be strictly correct. Neverthe- less, they are sufficiently suggestive to demonstrate the distinct differences that exist between the simple proteins. Table II undoubtedly gives the most accurate figures obtainable at present for the quantitative yield of ** & •a H §S II O C-) S § HH- < CO 8B O H a » w w H a (Z) (Z) (Z) (Z) piouiiunqjY (I) uiast?o puoraiv tuoaj mptreuiv (Z) (Z) (S) (I) inuinqjv tutuas (S) (T) (pooi uoaj (I) (t (T) SCVJ rH >O f-. OO VO CM CO O rH ot>. 1010 oo 10 t** oo *vi+, O O r-C VO rH O r-C rH o\ NT"'* CO rH OO O t^ CMO •^* O C7\ IO CM O «O 00 00 IO t^. rH rH rH ^ IO PJ O fH OO O rH OO or^~ CO ^0^ )~J~VO' rH rH CM OO~T * • • • CO VO rH •*}• Tj- CO CO i co >o co co o •* r-. : rH O* O O) rH rf rH + IO •* O 'i S.S - THE PROTEINS 23 amino acids obtained by hydrolysis from proteins representing various groups of these substances. TABLE II. QUANTITATIVE COMPARISON OF AMINO ACIDS OBTAINED BY HYDROLYSIS FROM PROTEINS (Compiled by T. B. Osborne, 1914)* (After Mendel) Casein Oval- bum in Gliadin Zein I Lejf umin Edesttn | (pea) Glycocoll 0.00 1.50 7.20 9.35 6.70 0.23 3.20 15.55 1.39 0.50 4.50 j 2.50 3.81 5.95 1.50 1.61 0.00 2.22 2.50 10.71 3.56 ? 5.07 9.10 2.20 ? 1.77 ? 1.7* 4.91 3.76 present 1.34 0.00 2.00 3.34 6.62 13.22 ? 2.35 43.66 0.58 0.13 1.61 0.45 1.49 2.91 0.15 1.00 5.22 0.00 13.39 1.88 19.55 9.04 f 6.55 26.17 1.71 1.02 3.55 ? 0.82 1.55 0.00 0.00 3.64 3.80 3.60 6.20 14.50 4.10 ? 3.09 18.74 4.50 0.33 2.13 1.00 2.19 14.17 1.65 present 2.28 0.38 2.08 ? 8.00 3.22 ? 3'. 75 13.80 5.30 0.53 1.55 ? 2.42 10.12 4.29 present 1.99 Valine Leucine . . ... Oxyproline Glutaminic acid Aspartic acid. .... Serine Tyrosine . . Histidine Arginine Lysine Tryptophane, about Ammonia 65.49 48.85 84.73 1.87 82.28 57.43 These analyses are combinations of what appear to be the best de- terminations of various chemists. It may be seen from these tables that certain pro- teins, as serum albumin and casein contain no glyco- coll, whereas serum globulin contains a small amount and gelatin a large quantity. Alanine presents vari- able figures but is usually present. The same may be said of leucine, phenylalanine, proline, and aspartic acid. Tyrosine may be absent as in gelatin. Glutamic 24: THE AMINO ACIDS acid may show very wide variations being present to the extent of nearly 44 per cent in wheat gliadin where- as gelatin contains less than 1 per cent. Tryptophane may be absent as in zein and gelatin. Arginine shows great variation being present in largest quantity in the protamines (salmine). On the other hand, lysine is absent in salmine as well as in zein. In the protamine, salmine, histidine is not present but may be isolated from all other examples of simple proteins shown here. It is clear that in general the various proteins are made up of the same units and it undoubtedly follows that the individual protein characteristics are bestowed by the relative proportion of the units or by their absence. In the tables given it will be observed that in most instances the total amino acids fall far short of the theoretical yield, a deficit of 40 to 50 per cent being in order. Previously it has been assumed that only a portion of the amino acids was known. At present, however, it seems very probable that the deficit is to be explained on the hypothesis of inadequate methods of analysis. SYNTHETIC PROOF OF THE STRUCTURE OF PROTEIN Since the time of Liebig it has been assumed that the protein molecule consisted of a huge complex of amino acids linked together in some unknown manner. There are many possibilities for such combinations and certain of them have been subjected to experimen- THE PROTEINS 25 tation without, however, yielding any very far-reaching conclusions. It remained for Emil Fischer and his associates in 1901 to conceive of a combination which undoubtedly will ultimately lead to a clear under- standing of the structure of the protein molecule. These combinations of amino acids were termed polypeptides. Just as we have mono-, di-, or tri- saccharictes^so there may be di-, tri-, etc.,-peptides. According to Fischer's method the amino acids are linked together by dehydration of their hydroxyl and amino groups, the carboxyl group of each acid being condensed with the amino group of its neighbor in the molecule, thus NHH I R. CH.CO NH OH H :.COOH By continued union of amino acids infinite possi- bilities of complexes are presented. Actually com- pounds containing as many as eighteen amino acids have been synthesized by Fischer and some of the products obtained have shown properties similar to those of the native protein. After demonstration of the possibility of forming protein-like compounds by synthesis Fischer next attempted to determine whether similar simple com- plexes could be derived from proteins by suitable treat- 26 THE AMINO ACIDS ment. For this purpose he employed a mild hydrolysis which only partially broke up the large aggregates formed and he succeeded in isolating from the pro- ducts peptides identical with those made synthetically. Since then other investigators have separated similar compounds. One of the best proofs that proteins are built up of these amino acid complexes is that, also furnished by Fischer, of the action of various enzymes upon the synthetical products. It was found that with the exception of pepsin the various enzymes of the body are quite capable of hydrolyzing the polypeptides into amino acids. Although these investigations prove beyond doubt that amino acids are linked together in protein in the form of polypeptides, there are possibilities of other forms of combination which will be revealed only by future research. For the present we are justified in accepting the hypothesis of the protein molecule as a huge complex polypeptide. REFERENCES TO LITERATURE Abderhalden: Text Book of Physiological Chemistry. 1914. Abderhalden and Weil: Zeitschrift fur physiologische chemie. 1913, 88, p. 272. [Norleucine.] Hammarsten: Text Book of Physiological Chemistry. 1914. Kossel: The Chemical Composition of the Cell. The Harvey Lectures. 1911-1912. THE PROTEINS 27 Kossel: The Proteins. Johns Hopkins Bulletin. 1912, 23, p. 65. Mann: Chemistry of the Proteins. 1906. Mendel: Nutrition and Growth: Harvey Lectures 1914-15. Journal of the American Medical Association. 1915, 64, p. 1539. Osborne: The Vegetable Proteins, 1909. Osborne: Chemistry of the Proteins. The Harvey Lectures, 1910-1911. Plimmer: Chemical Constitution of the Proteins, 1908. Van Slyke: The Proteins. New York Medical Journal. 1912, August 10 and 17. CHAPTER II DIGESTION, AND BACTERIAL ACTIVITY IN RELATION TO THE AMINO ACIDS Concerning the nature of protein digestion Schaefer in 1898 wrote : "The products found toward the end of a proteid digestion in vitro are distinguished from the proteids from which they originate by being slightly diffusible. To this fact great importance was at one time attributed, because it was thought that only pro- teids in a diffusible form were capable of absorption, and hence that peptonization was in all cases a neces- sary preliminary. It is now generally admitted that many forms of native proteid are capable of entering the epithelial cells (of the intestine) without previous change by digestion or otherwise ; and in those cases in which a proteid is incapable of direct absorption a much less profound change than peptonization is suffi- cient to render it so, namely, conversion into acid or alkali albumin." With regard to the extent of amino acid formation in digestion Schaefer says : "It is not known with certainty to what extent amino acids are formed from proteids, in the natural course of intes- tinal digestion. The experimental evidence is some- what conflicting, but the majority of observers are of the opinion that but little proteid is absorbed as leucine or tyrosine, being nearly all absorbed as albumose or DIGESTION 29 peptone, or even at a still earlier stage. The only posi- tive evidence as to the formation of leucine and tyrosine in natural digestion, rests on the amounts found in the intestinal contents during protein diges- tion." It is then stated that in general the quantities of amino acids present during digestion are small. In 'the few years since the above was written the advances made in the chemistry of the proteins and of digestion have made necessary a radical revision of our ideas of the nature and extent of the alimentary treat- ment of protein. No longer tenable is the view that digestion stops with the transformation of insoluble and non-diffusible substances into compounds soluble and diffusible, nor can the idea be accepted of a dis- tinction between directly assimilable and non-assimi- lable proteins. The change to "peptone" is now held to be merely an intermediate stage in digestion, not the end, as was once assumed. According to the latest con- ception of protein digestion a profound disintegration occurs, the ultimate products formed being a variety of polypeptides and amino acids. Digestion, in accord- ance with this idea, consists in a series of hydrolytic cleavages which are induced through the agencies of the enzymes present in the gastro-enteric tract. The products formed by these enzymes undoubtedly are identical with those produced outside the body by means of the action of acids. Amino acids therefore must be looked upon as the ultimate nitrogenous food- stuffs— it is to these substances that the organism must look for its essential requirement of nitrogen. 30 THE AMINO ACIDS ARE AMINO ACIDS FORMED DURING GASTRIC DIGESTION OF PROTEIN ? Protein digestion is initiated in the stomach through the action of gastric juice — the active constituents being pepsin and hydrochloric acid. In investigating the nature and extent of gastric digestion three general methods have been employed — as follows : (1) the stomach tube method, the only procedure applicable to man, whereby the stomach contents are withdrawn at intervals after a meal, (2) animals fed definite diets are quickly killed at varying periods of time and the stomach contents examined ; or animals are killed with the stomach empty, food introduced and analyzed at intervals, (3) the polyfistulous method — fistulas being inserted in the stomach and at various points in the intestine, the food products being withdrawn through these openings. What products are formed in the stomach under the influence of peptic digestion? It is self-evident that experiments carried out under artificial conditions, as in beakers, can afford no positive assurance that the products are identical with those formed in the stom- ach. Kuhne was the first to demonstrate that pepsin digestion in vitro leads only to the formation of pro- teoses and peptones. On the other hand, numerous recent investigations have shown by the polyfistulous method that under normal conditions also proteoses and peptones represent the final stages in gastric digestion of protein. All the protein does not of necessity reach DIGESTION 31 the peptone stage. Indeed, in general the process goes only as far as the proteose stage as may be seen from the following table from London. In these experi- ments dogs were fed different types of proteins and from a fistula below the pylorus the products were collected. Kind of Protein Fed Percentage of Proteases Found Egg Albumin 72.5 Gliadin 677 Edestin 60.3 Casein 59.1 Gelatin 50.6 Serum Albumin 46.1 London and his co-workers also found that upon feeding varying quantities of the same protein a defi- nite proportion of proteoses was always formed, thus — Quantity of Gliadin Fed Percentage of Proteoses Found in grams 25 80.8 50 86.1 75 86.5 100 84.9 It is therefore probable that ingested protein enters the duodenum largely in the form of proteoses and to a smaller extent as peptones. By long continued action of both artificial and nor- mal gastric juice various investigators have observed the gradual formation of amino acids. These results obtained from digestive mixtures allowed to stand for months cannot be regarded as applicable to normal 32 THE AMINO ACIDS stomach digestion which is at most a matter of hours. They may be explained in several ways, as for instance in those cases where extracts of the stomach were employed amino acids may arise from autolytic proc- esses, or perhaps in all cases from the action of hydro- chloric acid alone. Protein is a labile molecule which apparently needs slight inducement to start on the downward path to its demolition into amino acids. The formation of amino acids in gastric digestion under normal conditions seems hardly probable. Against such an idea may be set the fact that pepsin- hydrochloric acid is utterly incapable of breaking down artificial polypeptides thus far tested. On the other hand, they are readily split by pancreatic juice. It would seem therefore that in peptic digestion neither amino acids nor relatively simple polypeptides are normally found in significant . amounts. Gastric digestion, however, has the very important function of preparing protein for the later action of trypsin and the intestinal juices. Fischer and Abder- halden have shown that tryptic digestion is much more rapid and complete when protein has been previously acted upon by pepsin-hydrochloric acid. If casein is first digested with an artificial gastric juice and then subjected to the influence of trypsin amino acids like proline and phenylalanine could be isolated. Treated with trypsin alone casein failed to yield the free amino acids ; instead a corresponding polypeptide was present. One may conclude therefore that although gastric digestion fails to yield amino acids directly it aids in DIGESTION 33 their rapid formation indirectly by facilitating the action of trypsin. INTESTINAL DIGESTION Ktihne made the important discovery that there is an essential difference between the digestive action of trypsin and that of pepsin. He stated that the influ- ence of the former does not cease with the formation of peptone but is carried to a stage where crystalline products appear — the amino acids. As late as 1900, however, these substances were regarded as by-pro- ducts in natural digestion — of little significance and formed in relatively small quantities. At that time the cleavage products recognized were leucine, tyrosine, aspartic acid, glutamtc acid, lysine, arginine and histi- dine and proteinochromogen (see Chapter I). With the growth of knowledge concerning protein chemistry most of the characteristic amino acids have since been isolated from intestinal contents. In 1906 Cohnheim gave a new meaning to intestinal digestion by his discovery of an enzyme capable of splitting proteoses and peptones into simpler products. Cohnheim was of the opinion that synthesis of protein from peptones occurred in the intestinal wall. While endeavoring to determine this point he noted that the characteristic peptone reaction disappeared. Its dis- appearance was not due to protein synthesis as was early assumed, but because crystalline decomposition products were formed from it. This chemical trans- 34 THE AMINO ACIDS formation was shown to be enzymatic in nature and to the enzyme Cohnheim gave the name erepsin. Later investigators showed that erepsin is quite specific in its action — it has no influence upon native proteins with the exception of casein and gelatin — but is capable of completely transforming proteoses and peptones into amino acids, such as leucine, tyrosine, lysine, histidine, and arginine. In intestinal digestion, therefore, two agencies are to be considered in protein disintegration, namely, trypsin and erepsin. From these two differ- ent types of activity one may perhaps draw the con- clusion that there is a purposeful function for each. It may be imagined for instance that trypsin may per- form a twofold function, the degradation of the protein molecule which may have escaped gastric diges- tion to the proteose or peptone stage, or completely to amino acids. Erepsin on the other hand is present to guarantee that all complicated structures as proteoses, peptones, or polypeptides are reduced to their simplest terms. It is apparent, therefore, from the distribution of enzymes in the intestinal tract that there is a natural provision for ingested protein to be subjected to a series of hydrolytic cleavages whereby only relatively simple amino acids are finally present. Although it was generally admitted that protein di- gestion may proceed to the stage of amino acids it was exceedingly difficult to prove the fact when applied to the alimentary tract under normal conditions. The difficulty was twofold in nature. In the first place, demolition of the protein molecule is not of the nature DIGESTION 35 of an explosion resulting in a large number of frag- ments scattered about, but instead it may be looked upon as a kind of slow erosion whereby certain pro- jecting pieces are rubbed or broken off. Secondly, absorption takes place rapidly and the erosion products have a tendency to disappear from the alimentary canal. A knowledge of the thorough character of intestinal digestion has been made possible through the employment of the polyfistulous method devised by London. Animals with a series of fistulas along the intestinal tract were fed gliadin and from successive openings the enteric contents were examined for the quantity of tyrosine and glutamic acid present. It was shown that in the duodenal contents 0.75 gram ty rosin and 2.5 grams of glutamic acid were present, in the jejunum were 1.1 gram tyrosin and 20.9 grams of glutamic acid while the ileum yielded only a trace of tyrosin and 33 grams of glutamic acid. Similar experi- ments with casein and meat yielded comparable results. From these observations it is quite evident that the processes of digestion in the intestine are gradual in nature but the rate of disintegration is much greater than obtains in artificial digestion mixtures. The apparent explanation for the slower rate of hydrolysis in in vitro experiments is that the digestion enzymes form compounds with the amino acids split off and thus are rendered inactive. This inactivation probably does not occur to any extent in the intestine because the amino acids do not accumulate therein, undoubtedly being absorbed almost as soon as they are split off. 36 THE AMINO ACIDS The small intestine, therefore, may be regarded as the seat of profound protein digestion, the products arising being the ammo acids typical for hydrolytic cleavage of protein. Undoubtedly all digestible pro- teins are ultimately reduced to the condition of amino acids. From this it follows according to present views that nitrogenous metabolism is concerned mainly with the amino acids and the transformations which they undergo. INTESTINAL BACTERIA AND THE AMINO ACIDS In the early days of the history of protein digestion great difficulty was experienced in the determination of the actual products formed because of the accompani- ment of putrefaction. This was especially true for tryptic digestion where it is desirable to maintain an alkaline medium, an environment also favorable for bacterial growth. Kuhne was the first to demonstrate the activity of trypsin in the presence of antiseptics and through the employment of antiseptic digestion mixtures a sharp division line was soon drawn between the products of tryptic digestion and those formed by bacterial agencies. In general the products of putrefaction are identical whether formed outside the body or within. The type of action is similar to other kinds of digestion activity. Indeed, there is little doubt that the same kind of agencies are at work in the two instances, namely, enzymes. In the one case they are present in a secre- DIGESTION 37 tion, as in intestinal juice, in the other instance they are contained within an organism. In bacterial digestion the first stages of digestion are very similar to those induced by trypsin. If the protein is insoluble solution is first effected which is not a rapid process as in the case of trypsin. The proteoses and peptones are next formed but are quickly transformed into lower decom- position products. Proteoses and peptones are much more readily attacked than are the native proteins, which may not begin to undergo a profound change until the former have been broken up to smaller mole- cules. Putrefaction may be regarded as causing a different type of cleavage than occurs in ordinary tryptic or in- testinal digestion as exemplified by the specific sub- stances produced. It would appear much more likely, however, that the early stages of tryptic digestion and those induced by bacteria are identical in both instances, amino acids being the final products. On the other hand, little or no putrefaction occurs in the small intes- tine and there is little reason to assume that under ordinary circumstances any unchanged protein or perhaps even proteoses or peptones succeeds in pass- ing the ileo-caecal valve. It is therefore probable that normally putrefactive bacteria act upon the amino acids rather than upon their precursors, the complex protein molecules. It is even doubted whether pure solutions of native proteins will putrefy directly. Accepting the hypothesis that it is the amino acids which are con- cerned primarily in putrefactive processes the forma- 38 THE AMINO ACIDS tion of the substances characteristic of putrefaction is readily understood. The amino acids which are espe- cially susceptible to bacterial action are tyrosine and tryptophane. From tyrosine a whole series of com- pounds may be formed and are regularly present as putrefactive products, as for example, paroxyphenyl- propionic acid (hydro-paracumaric acid), and paroxy- phenylacetic acid (also phenylpropionic and phenyl- acetic acids), as well as paracresol and phenol. The relationships are readily seen from the following formulae : OH o OH OH CH9 CH.NH, I COOH Tyrosine, or p. oxy-phenyl o-amino-propionic acid OH COOH p. oxy-phenyl propionic acid p. oxy-phenyl acetic acid OH Phenol DIGESTION 39 From tryptophane the malodorous bodies indole and skatole may be produced, thus : C.CH2CH.NH2.COOH H Nl Indole-amino- propionic acid Tryptophane C.CH2CH2.COOH CH NH Indole- propionic acid CH Indole-acetic acid In the explanation of these changes in both instances it is seen that the types of chemical reactions are iden- tical. First deamination or splitting off of ammonia, NH3, occurs. This is followed by a cleavage of carbon dioxicfc, oxidation, and finally demethylation. The chemical transformations therefore are quite varied and extensive. When putrefaction is mentioned one invariably thinks of indole, skatole, the oxy acids, etc. These compounds, however, by no means represent all of the substances actually formed for a type of chemical compound has been isolated which is also peculiarly THE AMINO ACIDS characteristic of putrefaction — namely, the amines. Dixon and Taylor in 1907 aroused considerable interest by the publication of their observation that alcoholic extracts of the human placenta when injected intro- venously caused a marked rise in blood pressure and contractions of the pregnant uterus. It was later shown that these phenomena failed to appear in placen- tal extracts free from putrefaction. Evidence was soon produced showing that putrefaction of the placenta caused the production from tyrosine of a new body, namely p-oxyphenylethylamine. This substance was isolated from a pancreas digestion several years pre- viously by Emerson and its production as a product of tryptic action was regarded as unique. In the light of present knowledge there is little doubt that here also it was formed through bacterial agency. This new substance is produced by the liberation of CO2 from tyrosine, thus : OH OH ICOOJH Tyrosine p. oxyphenyl-ethylamme DIGESTION 41 To this compound has been given the name tyramine. I It is of special significance both from the chemical and pharmacological standpoints because of its resemblance in both respects to epinephrine. OH OH CH2 CH3 I NH9 Tyramine Epinephrine Tyramine acts upon the sympathetic nervous system as does epinephrine. Its action, however, is somewhat weaker. Its effects are produced whether absorbed from subcutaneous tissues or from the alimentary canal. A further interest attaches to tyramine in that it is one of the substances that confers upon ergot its characteristic action on the uterus. Not only is tyramine found in putrefaction mixtures without the body, but it has been isolated from the contents of the large intestine and it may, therefore, be looked upon as a product formed regularly in the body. On the other hand its presence in the alimentary canal does not necessarily imply that it was formed 42 THE AMINO ACIDS there for it has been shown quite recently that it may be ingested with certain food products. Thus tyramine occurs in such varieties of cheeses as the Camembert, Roquefort, Emmenthal and even the American cheddar cheese is not free from it. In a manner similar to the formation of tyramine we may have amines produced from other amino acids by bacteria. From leucine may be formed isoamyla- mine, thus : CHS CH CH I I CHa CH, CH.NH, CH2 (COOH NHa Leticine Isoamylamine From tryptophane a corresponding amine may be produced, thus : C.CH2.CH.NH2.COOH /\ C.CH2.CH2.NHs H NH \/ NH Tryptophane Indole-ethylamine When histidine is subjected to the action of putre- factive bacteria it is transformed to /J-iminazolylethyl- DIGESTION 43 amine or as it has been called histamine. The reaction occurring follows. This substance besides possessing an action upon the nervous system is capable of producing symptoms identical with those of anaphylactic shock. Its pres- ence in the alimentary canal has also been demon- strated. The diamines, cadaverine and putrescine, arise in the alimentary through the action of bacteria. Cadav- erine is produced in the following manner, lysine serv- ing as the mother substance. Lysine, which has the following formula: CHa.CHa.CHa.CHa.CH.COOH NHa NHa by cleavage of carbon dioxide yields cadaverine which has the structure below 44 THE AMINO ACIDS CH2.CHs.CHa.CHa.CH2 NH2 NH2 Cadaverine or Pentamethyldiamine Arginine, another amino acid, is the mother sub- stance of putrescine. Arginine under suitable condi- tions yields urea and ornithine, thus : CH2.CH2.CH2.CH.COOH I ' I NH NHa = NHa C - I C C /\ /\ HC CH HC CH II I II I HC CH HC CH CH CH Phenylalanine Phenyl-pyruvic acid COOH 1 COOH 1 CH, CH, . 1 C= 1 c = o 1 1 CH II CH, 104 THE AMINO ACIDS If we assume that the next step is the simple splitting open of the benzene nucleus of phenyl-pyruvic acid its formula may be written as follows : COOH I c = o f- f by cleavage of CO, this . CH CH becomes CH CH II H " CH CH C = O e I H H Phenyl-pyruvic Diacetic acid acid written in open chain form By the splitting in two of this chain and oxidation aceto-acetic or diacetic acid is produced which in turn may be directly oxidized to CO2 and H2O. Secondly, employing tyrosine as a specific example we may follow it through the following changes : FURTHER FATE OF AMINO ACIDS 105 OH OH by oxidative deamination CHa CHNH, I COOH (Tyrosine) p.oxyphenyl amino-propionic acid oxidation and rearrange- ment CHa C= O I COOH (Ketone acid) p.oxyphenyl pyroracemic acid by CO3 cleavage Hydroquinone pyroracemic acid 106 THE AMINO ACIDS Acetone Bodies COa + HaO CHa COOH Homogentisic acid In these transformations homogentisic acid is an important intermediary product which at times appears in the urine. (See Alkaptonuria.) In harmony with the idea that homogentisic acid is an intermediary product in the decomposition of tyrosine and pheny- lalanine is the demonstration that the liver may form acetone from homogentisic acid. Little definite is ^ known concerning intermediary stages in the fate oi trytophane* in the human body. Arginine undoubtedly undergoes hydrolysis by the enzyme arginase yielding urea and ornithine and the latter may also yield urea. NH3 C = NH I NH.CHa.CHa.CHa.CH.NHa.COOH + HaO = Arginine FURTHER FATE OF AMINO ACIDS 107 CHa.CH3.CH3.CH.COOH NH3 C = O + NH3 NHa I NH, Ornithine SYNTHESIS OF AMINO ACIDS It has been demonstrated that alanine, phenylalanine and tyrosine may be synthesized in the liver by per- fusion of ammonium salts of ketone acids. R.CH3.CO.COONH4 Ammonium salt of ketonic acid ,OH R.CH3.C<; — COOH R.CH2.CH.NHa.COOH "NH Imino acid hydrate Amino acid The possibility of synthesis of ammo acids in this manner renders the interpretation of metabolic changes in the tissues more complex than ever and confers upon the organism a range of synthetic powers practically unlimited. , Under ordinary circumstances, however, it is un- likely that amino acids are synthesized to a great extent V r 108 THE AMINO ACIDS in this way. The question has been tested experiment- ally in an indirect manner. Vlf protein with a certain amino acid lacking is fed to animals it is reasonable to assume that if nitrogenous equilibrium can be main- tained a synthesis of the missing amino acid must have occurred. From experiments planned to test this .hypothesis it has been shown that no amino acids with the exception of glycocoll are ordinarily formed by synthesis. For glycocoll the evidence is strongly indic- ative of synthesis. As a rule in the body there is about 5 per cent of glycocoll nitrogen in every 100 grams of protein nitrogen. It is well known that benzoic acid ingested is united with glycocoll to form hippuric acid — in other words, benzoic acid feeding robs the body of glycocoll. If benzoic acid is fed in sufficient quantities to exhaust the possible content of glycocoll preformed in the tissues, the continued forma- tion of hippuric acid must be provided for by glycocoll newly formed or synthesized. Hippuric acid does con- tinue to be formed under these circumstances and hence glycocoll must be synthesized. It is possible, of course, that glycocoll may be formed from the trans- formation of some other amino acid, as by cleavage of a long change amino acid. Another evidence in favor of the synthesis of glycocoll is the following — milk proteins are very poor in glycocoll, yet suckling ani- mals are capable in a short time of building up in their bodies proteins which contain far more of this amino acid than can be accounted for by the ingestion of glycocoll yielded by the milk. FURTHER FATE OF AMINO ACIDS 109 THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN CARBOHYDRATES AND AMINO ACIDS i. The Formation of Carbohydrate from Amino Acids For a long time it has been accepted that carbo- hydrate may be formed from ingested protein. To determine the mechanism of this transformation many experiments have been carried through upon animals. In particular the formation of glycogen from ingested protein has been subjected to experimentation and although the consensus of opinion would indicate that protein may give rise to glycogen formation, the experimental conditions under which most of the inves- tigations were made are not free from criticism. The evidence of clinical experience, with diabetes, where fat or carbohydrate ingestion cannot always be held responsible for the large amounts of sugar passing through the kidneys daily, points positively to protein as the source of the carbohydrate excreted. In agree- ment with this conception is the observation that the urinary nitrogen and sugar excretion in the patho- logical state mentioned run along parallel lines. How may this sugar formation be explained? One may assume for instance, that protein contains groups of a carbohydrate nature or groups closely allied to the carbohydrates. Although it must be accepted that certain proteins do contain carbohydrate groups, the possession of such groups by proteins is by no means universal, and, on the other hand, one is unwarranted in stating that any specific protein will not lead to 110 THE AMINO ACIDS sugar production. If we take a typical protein as egg albumin, and then on the assumption that all the nitro- gen present is eliminated from the body as urea, we find left over a large carbon residue, the so-called "carbon moiety," of the protein which may be regarded as material capable of being transformed into carbo- hydrate. This potential of carbohydrate forming material must gain access to the blood stream, hence to the tissues, in the form of amino acids, in accord- ance with the present-day view of the processes of metabolism. The problem under consideration, there- fore, resolves itself in the question, "Are amino acids capable of being transformed into carbohydrates?" The most convincing work in this direction is that of Lusk and his pupils. They have administered to dogs rendered diabetic with phlorhizin various amino acids and have observed that some yield sugar whereas others fail to do so. In their experiments the relation- ship between the dextrose and nitrogen of the urine, the D : N ratio, was determined. Under suitable con- ditions this becomes a constant. The ingestion of sugar forming substances changes this constant and any change serves as an index to the quantity of sugar formed from a given amount of substance introduced. It was found that the N-f ree parts of glycocoll, alanine, aspartic acid, and glutamic acid, containing respectively two, three, four, and five carbon atoms may be either completely or partially transformed to dextrose. All of the glycocoll and all of the alanine were converted FURTHER FATE OF AMINO ACIDS 111 into glucose, whereas three of the carbon atoms con- tained in aspartic and glutamic acids were so changed. The stages through which these amino acids are carried have been outlined by Lusk. In the first place it is assumed that the initial change is a hydrolytic deamination whereby ammonia is formed and a hydroxy group is added to the denitrogenized amino acid. According to this view glycocoll would first be changed to glycolic acid, which on reduction would yield glycolic aldehyde, three molecules of which will form one molecule of dextrose. The chemical rela- tionships are shown below : *y CHa.NHa CHa.OH 3 + HaO = 3 | - 3 O = COOH COOH Glycocoll Glycolic acid CHaOH 3 | = C6HX)6 CHO Glycolic Dextrose aldehyde For alanine the changes undergone are a direct trans- formation into lactic acid which is well known to give rise to dextrose production. CH8 CH, 2 CHNHa + HaO = 2 CHOH = C6H,O, I I ^ COOH COOH Alanine Lactic acid Dextrose THE AMINO ACIDS With aspartic acid only three of the carbon atoms are available for dextrose formation, the remaining carbon atom being changed to carbon dioxide in ac- cordance with the following reactions : COOH I CHa CHNHa COOH Aspartic acid H30 = 2 COOH I CHa CHaOH 2CO2 /3 lactic acid Dextrose As with aspartic acid so also with glutamic acid only three of the carbon atoms are changed to dextrose, the two remaining carbon atoms being liberated in the form of acetic acid. 4HaO COOH 1 2 CHa 1 + CH, CHNHa COOH Glutamic acid COOH 2 CH3 CH2OH 2 C :HOH COOH Acetic acid and Glyceric acid Dextrose Dakin has demonstrated that serine, proline, orni- thine and arginine are all capable of yielding large amounts of sugar when given to glycosuric dogs. FURTHER FATE OF AMINO ACIDS 113 Apparently arginine is the only amino acid with more than five carbon atoms which furnishes glucose freely. In this case it is probable that the sugar comes from the ornithine moiety with five carbon atoms, into which it may be converted by the action of arginase. Lysine is the only straight chain amino acid derivative of protein which fails to yield sugar. Although the rela- tionship of the remaining amino acids to carbohydrate metabolism is less definitely established, Lusk has made the interesting calculation that in diabetes sugar may arise from protein to the extent of nearly 60 per cent. He says, "It becomes evident that there may be a condition of nutrition in which protein is used neither for repair nor for growth, but simply to be diaminized and subsequently to act like fat or carbo- hydrate as nutritive materials for the organism." 2. The Formation of Amino Acids from Carbo- hydrates The formation of amino acids from carbohydrate material is a reaction less well known than the reverse process. The close relationship existing between lactic acid and carbohydrates on the one hand and lactic acid and alanine on the other suggests the ready trans- formation of glycogen to alanine presumably with lactic acid and ammonium pyruvate as intermediary products. With this suggestion in mind Embden per- fused a liver rich in glycogen and found that alanine was formed. When, however, perf usion of a glycogen- 114 THE AMINO ACIDS free liver was carried through alanine was not present in significant quantities. From experiments of this nature it is evident that the metabolic processes con- cerned in protein metabolism are intimately associated with those of the intermediary metabolism of carbo- hydrate, and further that at times at least protein may serve for both sources of nitrogen and carbonaceous material. Protein, therefore, should not be regarded in the strict sense merely as a purveyor of the nitrogen which is essential for life processes. It is much more than that, as has been demonstrated. ANOMALIES OF AMINO ACID METABOLISM Alkaptonuria In previous pages it has been pointed out that the normal organism is capable of demolishing the benzene ring as found in tyrosine and phenylalanine for under normal conditions no evidence of these substances can be found in the urine. For the successive steps as- sumed to occur in this destruction see p. 105. How- ever, there are certain individuals who apparently are unable to break open the aromatic ring and in the urine is found an intermediary decomposition product, homo- gentisic acid. Urine containing homogentisic acid exhibits a tendency to turn dark on exposure to the air and may show a strong reducing action. This condi- tion, known as alkaptonuria, is of rare occurrence and may last through life without affecting the health of the individual. It can scarcely be regarded as of FURTHER FATE OF AMINO ACIDS 115 pathological nature, but should be looked upon rather as an anomaly of metabolism and is generally con- sidered as being hereditary in origin. It occurs oftener in man than in woman and blood relationship, as first cousins, predisposes to the condition. Whenever homogentisic acid is present in the urine, it is there in relatively large amounts for the anomaly is an absolute one, that is, apparently homogentisic acid formed is destroyed by the normal organism. The relationship of tyrosine phenylalanine and homo- gentisic acid are shown below : OH CH, CH.NH, COOH Tyrosine Homogentisic acid Phenylalanine The significance of alkaptonuria in connection with the metabolism of the amino acids is that the appear- ance of homogentisic in the urine of alkaptonurics gave the first hint as to the probable transformations occurring in the demolition of the benzene radical found in tyrosine and phenylalanine. That homogen- 116 THE AMINO ACIDS tisic acid is a step in the degradations of these amino acids has been doubted by Dakin who believes that there is in these subjects an abnormal formation of homogentisic acid as well as an inability to destroy it once formed. In accord with this idea he has shown how tyrosine and phenylalanine may be destroyed with- out homogentisic acid as an intermediary product (see p. 103). On the other hand, it has been demonstrated by Abderhalden that normal individuals may eliminate homogentisic acid when excessive quantities of tyrosine are fed. Also the administration of tyrosine or phenyl- alanine, or of foods rich in tyrosine, that is proteins, causes a significant increase in the excretion of homo- gentisic acid. If alkaptonurics live on a protein-free diet for short periods of time the excretion of homo- gentisic acid is markedly diminished, but does not dis- appear entirely. Undoubtedly the aromatic amino acids formed from tissue metabolism do not suffer destruction to any greater extent than those introduced into the blood from the food protein. Why an alkap- tonuric individual fails to destroy the tyrosine radicle is still a matter of conjecture. Cystinuria and Diaminuria Under ordinary circumstances cystine, the sulphur bearing amino acid fails to appear in the excreta, prob- ably undergoing extensive destruction. The sulphur is oxidized to sulphuric acid and eliminated as a sul- phate in the urine. In certain individuals, however, cystine appears in the urine and owing to its relatively FURTHER FATE OF AMINO ACIDS 117 slight solubility is deposited as hexagonal crystals. It may also form cystine concretions in the bladder. The condition of cystinuria with that of alkaptonuria must be regarded as an anomaly of metabolism. Cystinuria appears to be a distinctly hereditary condition since it may appear in families for many generations, and apparently follows the Mendelian law of heredity. Like alkaptonuria it is found oftener in males than in females ; it seems to lead to no pathological symptoms other than the formation of concretions. There is probably no complete failure to destroy cystine since only a portion of the cystine from protein ingested reappears in the urine. Undoubtedly a part of the cystine is catabolized in a normal manner. From the fact that cystinuria persists in the absence of protein intake and further that cystine fed to cystinurics fails to appear in the urine, the conclusion may be reached that the urinary cystine has its origin in that formed during catabolism of the tissues. It may be possible that in these subjects there is only a limited capacity for destroying amino acids in general for, in addition to cystine, leucine and tyrosine have been found in some cases. At times the diamines cadaverine and putrescine formed by putrefaction in the intestine may also be present in the urine of cystinurics. The diamines are significant in that they are two of the so-called ptomaines. Putrescine and cadaverine occur also in diseased conditions of the intestinal tract, thus they may be found in various infections, in cholera, dysen- 118 THE AMINO ACIDS tery, gastroenteritis, etc. Their origin in putrefaction of protein decomposition products together with their appearance in the urine of cystinurics led to the view that the cystine in the cases mentioned had a like source. This, however, has been shown to be incorrect. A second view was that diamines interfered with sulphur oxidation in the organism, hence the appearance of the unoxidized cystine. This idea has been shown to be untrue for cystinuria may occur in the absence of the diamines, and the administration of diamines has no influence upon the output of cystine in the urine. "In intestinal disturbances, it is probable that these com- pounds are the result of bacterial activity — indeed, they may be the metabolic end-products eliminated by bac- teria. In cystinuria, however, it is possible that a dif- ferent explanation for diaminuria is pertinent. It may be assumed, for instance, that in the beginning cysti- nuria and diaminuria are brought about through a similar, or indeed the same cause, or causes, for example, a gradually changing type of metabolism induced by some unknown agency, resulting in an anomaly of metabolism. If the anomaly is slight in character, cystine alone is eliminated as a result, whereas if the change in metabolism is sufficiently pro- nounced diamines are also excreted. If this assump- tion is accepted it is easy to explain why in some cases of cystinuria the diamines are absent, and that gradu- ally one or both of these compounds disappear, that cystinuria persists, but that cystinuria does not cease and leave diaminuria." FURTHER FATE OF AMINO ACIDS 119 REFERENCES TO LITERATURE Fate of Amino Acids Dakin: Oxidations and Reductions in the Animal Body. 1912. Dakin: Journal of Biological Chemistry. 1913, 14, p. 321. Lusk: Journal of the American Chemical Society. 1910, 32, p. 671. Lusk: Ergebnisse des Physiologic. 1912, 12, p. 315. [Phlor- hizin glycosuria.] Alkaptonuria Neuberg: Oppenheimer's Hanbuch der Biochemie. 1910, IV, 2, p. 353. Wells: Chemical Pathology. 1914. Cystinuria and Diaminuria Neuberg: Oppenheimer's Handbuch der Biochemie. 19fll/F, 2, p. 338. Underhill: Middleton Goldsmith Lecture for 1911. Archives of Internal Medicine. 1911, 8, p. 7 and p. 17. Wells: Chemical Pathology. 1914. CHAPTER VII THE AMINO ACIDS IN RELATION TO THE SPECIFIC DYNAMIC ACTION OF PROTEINS The view has been held for many years that the ingestion of protein increases the power of the body cells to metabolize materials brought to them. More recently it has been shown by Rubner that under suitable conditions each foodstuff is capable of exert- ing a specific accelerating influence upon the energy met^lolism. In order to maintain life Rubner believes that a fixed requirement of energy is necessary. When the organism is fasting, the essential energy require- ment may be furnished from the tissues of the organ- ism itself. After their ingestion the foodstuffs are changed in various ways with the evolution of heat until finally they are transformed into materials which are capable of supporting vital phenomena. The final products formed may be employed for the replacement of the substances oxidized during fasting. The heat produced in the formation of these compounds is added to the heat produced for the maintenance of vital processes, and the total heat production, there- fore, exceeds that found in starvation. This increased DYNAMIC ACTION OF PROTEINS 121 heat production induced by each foodstuff is different, and is specific for each foodstuff. Rubner, therefore, has named this effect "specific dynamic action." It has been shown under the correct conditions that if the energy metabolism of a fasting dog be represented as 100 calories, food must be given in the following amounts to prevent body loss, 106 calories of sugar, or 114 calories of fat, or 140 calories of protein. In an experiment by Rubner it was found that a fasting man metabolized 2042 calories. After the ingestion of 2450 calories of sugar he metabolized 2087. When given 2450 calories of meat 2566 calories were metab- olism. Whatever the cause of the greater metabolism of protein ingestion it is believed that there is produced a liberation of energy which cannot be used by the tissues in support of their activities but it is possible that it may contribute to the maintenance of body temperature. On a mixed diet this liberation of heat unavailable for energy purposes is not of great sig- nificance in the total metabolism since it increases the metabolism of energy less than one tenth on a mainte- nance diet above that when no food is eaten. Another explanation for the increased energy metab- olism after the ingestion of foodstuffs has been put forward by Zuntz, who ascribes this effect fo the mechanical work of the intestinal canal (Darmarbeit) performed during digestion and assimilation. Such a theory would seem to fit in well with the greater specific dynamic action of protein and its probably greater difficulty of digestion in comparison with 122 THE AMINO ACIDS sugar. To test the Zuntz hypothesis Benedict has attempted to produce the effects of food ingestion such as augmented mechanical work through increased peristalsis produced by large doses of purgatives, as sodium sulphate. In spite of greatly increased peris- talsis the administration of sodium sulphate failed to show any measurable increase in metabolism. "In the belief that when the intestine is full of partly digested food products and epithelial debris, the amount of mechanical work thereby incurred might be greater than that involved in several powerful peristaltic waves, experiments were made in which relatively large amounts of agar-agar were ingested, thus pro- ducing a bulky, voluminous stool. The agar-agar being practically non-oxidizable, there was no great complication due to the combustion of carbohydrate from the agar-agar. With the agar-agar it is reason- able to assume that there must have been an extensive segmentation process as well as peristaltic waves. But even under these conditions on the ideally con- trolled experiments there was absolutely no increase in metabolism. In so far, then, as the experiments on men show with controlled conditions, the work of peristalsis and probably of segmentation is not suffi- cient to be measured in the great daily energy trans- formation of the body. It is impossible to think of muscular activity of any kind taking place without some slight increased metabolism, but the amount involved in intestinal activity must be so small as to DYNAMIC ACTION OF PROTEINS 123 be entirely negligible in the extensive energy trans- formations for body maintenance." These results are in accord with conclusions reached earlier by Rubner who denied that the work of diges- tion and assimilation could be held responsible for the effects observed after food ingestion. Benedict is of the opinion that from the food sub- stances are absorbed which, carried by the blood, stimu- late cells to greater activity, and he further indicates that these unknown bodies are of an acid character. From his extensive investigation on the influence of amino acids upon metabolism, that is, their specific dynamic action, Lusk believes that the explanation of Rubner as to the cause of specific dynamic action must be revised. "Amino acids act as stimuli upon the cells, raising their power to metabolism. They may act instead of nerve stimuli when increased heat pro- duction is required in the presence of external cold — the chemical regulation of temperature of Rubner. The energy liberated in response to these stimuli may be supplied by carbohydrate or fat. When fat and carbohydrate are given separately or together there may be an increased heat production on account of the increase in the quantity of materials available for the nutrition of the cells. With the cessation of absorption and the return of the blood to the compo- sition it possessed before food was taken the metabo- lism falls to its basal value." When glucose and an amino acid, as alanine, are given together the metab- olism is increased to a point where the resultant effect 124 THE AMINO ACIDS is nearly equal to the sum of the two individual influ- ences. This indicates a distinct difference between the cause of the specific dynamic action of glucose and that of alanine. Two types of processes are here sug- gested, namely, a metabolism of plethora and amino acid stimulation. Carbohydrate or fat metabolites which are being absorbed from the intestine into the blood bring about a metabolism of plethora. In the metabolism of plethora the influx of carbohydrate or fat enables the cells to oxidize at a higher level through the increased mass action of food particles which are available. (Lusk.) A recent attempt by Lusk to ex- plain "amino acid stimulation" of the cells has resulted in the conclusion that some at least of the amino acids even when they are not oxidized "yield products of metabolism, either hydroxy or ketone acids which act as stimuli to induce higher oxidation in the organism. This is the conclusive proof of a true chemical stimu- lation of protoplasm within the mammalian organism. It explains the specific dynamic action of protein." As has been shown repeatedly throughout this book the effects characteristically produced by protein are gradually being ascribed as a function of the amino acids. The amino acids therefore may be regarded not alone as pabulum for the restoration of depleted cells but must also be looked upon as playing a distinct and significant role in the rate or extent of cellular metabolism. DYNAMIC ACTION OF PROTEINS 125 REFERENCES TO LITERATURE Lusk: The Science of Nutrition. Second Ed. 1909. Lusk: Journal of Biological Chemistry. 1915, 20, p. 555. Rubner: Zuntz, Benedict, Lusk. Trans, of the 15th Inter- national Congress on Hygiene and Demography. 1913, Part 2. Sherman: Chemistry of Food and Nutrition. 1911. CHAPTER VIII THE AMINO ACIDS AND SIMPLER NITRO- GENOUS COMPOUNDS AS FOODSTUFFS VALUE OF AMINO ACIDS AS FOODSTUFFS The dictum of Liebig that the animal organism is endowed with very limited capacities for processes of synthesis was accepted for a great many years with- out serious question. A partial reason for this assump- tion is to be found in the great difficulties to be over- come in putting the question to experimental proof. The discovery of erepsin by Cohnheim with the con- sequent readjustment of ideas relative to the extent and character of digestion processes and the form of products absorbed casts doubt upon the inability of the animal body to synthesize. It was reasonable to assume that the disintegration of the protein molecule to the stage of amino acids is with a purposeful object and that the absorption of such relatively small com- pounds as amino acids predicates the probability that synthesis must occur if the organism is obliged to reconstruct new protoplasm to replace that worn away through the many metabolic activities. About a dozen years ago the first attempt to deter- mine the possibility of positive protein synthesis was NITROGENOUS COMPOUNDS 127 made by Loewi. This investigator allowed protein to digest until it no longer gave a reaction with the biuret test an indication that products possessed of a protein nature had all been reduced to a lower stage. Upon feeding this mixture of amino acids together with fat and carbohydrate to a dog, Loewi demonstrated that nitrogen in the form contained in his digestion mixture was not alone capable of maintaining the life of the animal, but furthermore kept it in a state of nitrogenous equilibrium, a retention of nitrogen to- gether with an increase in weight being observed. The experiments of Loewi were quickly followed by those of Henderson and Dean, who were the first to employ digestion products formed through the action of acids rather than by ferments. They found nitro- gen retention but were uncertain whether it signified protein synthesis. As a result of many succeeding investigations it soon became clear that the power of the digestion products to replace body tissue depended upon the manner in which such products were formed. To put it differently, digestion products formed from protein by the agency of enzymes were fully capable of supplying to the body its necessary quota of nitro- gen whereas those products obtained from proteins through the action of acids could not take over so completely this function but were regarded as of value inasmuch as they could be looked upon as being "protein sparers." In this connection it may be well to cite some experiments of Abderhalden and Rona with mice. To these mice were fed different prepara- 128 THE AMINO ACIDS tions of casein together with sugar. To one series of mice unchanged casein was fed, to a second, casein that had been digested with pancreatin for a period of two months, a third series received casein digested for one month with pepsin-hydrochloric acid and then for two months with pancreatin, the fourth series were fed with casein hydrolyzed for ten hours with 25 per cent sulphuric acid. The results showed that those animals fed with casein digested with pancreatin for two months and those given unchanged casein lived about the same length of time. Mice fed on the other two preparations lived shorter periods of time. Other investigators obtained similar results. An interesting controversy now arose as to the reason for the specific difference between products formed by enzymes and those resulting from acid hydrolysis. Abderhalden and Rona from their work cited above put forth the hypothesis that the difference in the two products lay in their content of polypeptides. According to this view digestion by ferments results in the presence of considerable amounts of fairly complex polypeptides which serve as nuclei for the synthesis of new protein material. Hydrolysis by acid, however, carries the digestion beyond the stage of polypeptides, hence, no nuclei for synthesis are present and the inability of acid digestion mixtures to fully serve as nitrogenous pabulum is explained. In sup- port of their hypothesis they offer the observation that the casein preparation formed by pancreatin action contained only 16 per cent of polypeptides, that of the NITROGENOUS COMPOUNDS 129 pepsin-hydrochloric acid mixture further subjected to the influence of pancreatin contained only half as much polypeptides, whereas from that formed by acid hydrolysis polypeptides were entirely absent. Later, however, it was shown by Abderhalden and his co- workers that the varying content of polypeptides can- not be the sole reason for the differences observed in the two classes of products in their ability to supply the nitrogenous needs of the body, for a dog was kept alive for thirty-eight days and the only supply of nitro- gen was in a digestion mixture containing only amino acids. Again, a young dog gained weight and retained nitrogen in completely digested meat and a bitch was kept in nitrogenous equilibrium during lactation with meat digested to the amino acid stage. Abderhalden and London were able to maintain a dog with an Eck fistula (the liver shunted out of the portal circulation) on fully digested meat. From this experiment they further concluded that the liver could play a small role only in protein synthesis and used these results as support for their view that protein synthesis occurs during absorption. From the work of Henriques, Abderhalden and others it soon became evident that the difference in nutritive value between ferment and acid hydrolysis products could not be ascribed wholly to the presence or absence of polypeptides. Upon closer investiga- tion it developed that the failure of acid hydrolytic products to meet nutritive requirements satisfactorily could be explained by the fact that during acid hydroly- 130 THE AMINO ACIDS sis tryptophane, unquestionably one of the most impor- tant of the amino acids, is destroyed. The proof that herein lies the true explanation was furnished by Abderhalden and Frank, who succeeded in maintaining dogs in nitrogenous equilibrium on meat completely hydrolyzed by acid to which had been added a small amount of tryptophane. After the demonstration that the nitrogenous nutri- tive requirements of the organism can be supplied by a mixture consisting of the products of hydrolysis, whether by acids or enzymes, an attempt was made by Abderhalden to support a dog in nitrogen equilib- rium on an artificial mixture of amino acids to which were added carbohydrate and fat. The successful out- come of the investigation led Abderhalden to declare that the animal organism is capable of forming all the tissue constituents out of the simplest derivatives of the proteins. Inasmuch as carbohydrate and fat may be prepared synthetically, as may some of the amino acids, the problem of the artificial production of foodstuffs is solved according to Abderhalden, who says that such a possibility is limited only by the question of sufficient funds. From these observations it becomes evident that mixtures of amino acids are fully capable of supplying the nitrogenous needs of the organism when applied to the lower animals. An opportunity was afforded Abderhalden and his co- workers to extend this type of investigation to man. A boy with a stricture of the oesophagus on whom gastrotomy had been performed was the subject. To NITROGENOUS COMPOUNDS 131 him was given per rectum a mixture of protein (meat) digestion products obtained through the combined action of trypsin and erepsin. The experiment was continued for fifteen days and during this period nitrogen equilibrium was maintained, the body weight increased and the general condition of the subject was excellent. This brief review of the salient features of the problem leads to but one conclusion, namely, that the amino acids must be regarded as foodstuffs capable of supplying the nitrogenous needs of the organism, and that the chief factors to be taken into account with regard to the nutritive value of any protein or proteins are the character and the extent of the amino acids contained therein. THE VALUE OF AMIDES AND AMMONIUM SALTS AS FOODSTUFFS The nutritive value of various simple nitrogenous compounds has been a subject for investigation for many years. This is especially true for such sub- stances as the amides and has been of particular inter- est to those concerned with agricultural problems since in the food of herbivora amides may play an important role. From the viewpoint of nutrition in general, the proof that animals may thrive on amides or other simple nitrogenous compounds supplied as sources of nitrogen carries with it indirect evidence of 133 THE AMINO ACIDS the transformation of these substances into amino acids — in other words, amino acid synthesis occurs. Particular attention has been paid to the deter- mination of the value of asparagine as a source of nitrogen, one of the first investigators being Mer- cadente, who believed that protein formation could take place from asparagine, especially in plants. Sachse believed that protein was formed from aspara- gine by the simple addition of fatty aldehydes. On the other hand, Loewi thought that in the presence of carbohydrates protein was formed from asparagine by a series of condensations. Zuntz suggested that in herbivora asparagine was built up into protein by bacteria in the intestine previous to utilization. This latter view has been supported by numerous investi- gators, some of whom state that protein-forming bac- teria are widely distributed in nature and may act very efficiently and quickly when in suitable envi- ronment. The evidence available seems to speak strongly in favor of the view that asparagine may serve as source of nitrogen or act at least as a protein sparer, as much as two-thirds of the protein in the diet of herbivora being replaceable by asparagine. On the other hand, several investigators claim that aspara- gine cannot take the place of protein at all, hence, cannot be used as a source of nitrogen and that even the degree of protein sparing action that may be exhibited by this amide is extremely limited. In a comparable manner it has been suggested that various ammonium salts may also replace protein to NITROGENOUS COMPOUNDS 133 a certain extent at least, or act as protein sparers. The problem of the utilization of ammonium salts subjected to much experimentation in the past has recently been revived through the work of Grafe and Schlapfer who have asserted that ammonium salts, urea, and even nitrates may serve as sources of nitro- gen for the animal organism, and they regard the utilization as indicated by nitrogen retention as a process of amino acid synthesis. These results have been assailed by others on the ground that the observed retention of nitrogen as a result of feeding the above- mentioned compounds may be explained in other ways than as a proof of amino acid synthesis. "There are several ways in which they may be assumed to behave in the organism. In the first and foremost instance they may serve as pabulum for the alimentary bac- teria, which in turn are destroyed in large numbers in the digestive tract and can furnish a yield of per- fect protein synthesized from simple compounds like urea and the salts of ammonia. It is generally ad- mitted that in certain species like the herbivora, in which bacterial processes have a free play in the gastro-intestinal tube, the contribution of dead bac- terial bodies to the intake is by no means negligible." "The feeding of urea or ammonium salts might lead to an apparent nutritive advantage by depressing or inhibiting the usual breaking down of nitrogenous compounds in metabolism. This would accord with the belief that the products of cellular waste them- selves tend to impede cellular metabolism. Now that 134 THE AMINO ACIDS the synthesis of amino acids from ammonia and car- bohydrates has been accomplished directly or in- directly in the laboratory, the possibility of a similar reaction in the body must be reckoned with. Finally, the alleged utilization of urea and other simple nitro- gen derivatives may merely be an instance of unsus- pected retention and delayed excretion. Even so soluble a salt as an iodide may not be entirely recov- ered in the excreta until several days after its adminis- tration has been stopped. Surely no one would look on the temporary deficit as an indication of nutritive 'utilization' of the foreign salt." Various possibilities therefore present themselves in the interpretation of the alleged utilization of these simple nitrogenous substances. The influence of alimentary bacteria may be eliminated by parenteral feeding of the compounds, which, however, has not been feasible until recently when Henriques succeeded in devising a method whereby a slow constant stream of nutritive solution may be intravenously introduced into the body. Subjecting utilization of urea and ammonium salts to the test by means of this device, Henriques and Anderson have demonstrated that no permanent retention of these nitrogenous compounds occurred. It is therefore exceedingly improbable that the body itself is in a position to transform these sub- stances into amino acids. Amino acid synthesis is not an easy task for the organism nor is there evidence that even the transformation of one amino acid to another is accomplished to any extent. The organism NITROGENOUS COMPOUNDS 135 must have ready formed ammo acids supplied to it in sufficient quantity and variety if it is to accomplish its task of tissue building. REFERENCES TO LITERATURE Amino Acids as Foodstuffs Abderhalden: Zeitschrift fur physiologische Chemie. 1912, 77, p. 22. Cathcart: The Physiology of Protein Metabolism. 1912. Henriques and Anderson: Zeitschrift fur physiologische Chemie. 1913, 88, p. 357. Luthje: Ergebnisse des Physiologic. 1908, 7, p. 795. Cathcart: The Physiology of Protein Metabolism. 1912. [Amides.] Ammonium Salts Abderhalden: Zeitschrift fur physiologische Chemie. 1912, 75, p. 1, and 1912, 82, p. 1. Grafe and Schlapfer: Zeitschrift fur physiologische Chemie. 1912, 77, P. 1. Henriques and Anderson: Zeitschrift fur physiologische Chemie. 1914, 92, p. 21. Pescheck: Biochemische Zeitschrift. 1912, 45, p. 244. Underhill: Journal of Biological Chemistry. 1913, 15, p. 327 and p. 337. Underhill and Goldschmidt: Journal of Biological Chemistry. 1913, 15, P- 341. CHAPTER IX THE SPECIFIC ROLE OF AMINO ACIDS IN NUTRITION AND GROWTH That the chemical differences in proteins as deter- mined by their amino acid content must be of con- siderable significance in metabolic processes has been understood in a vague way for a long time. As soon as recognition was gained for the view that the prob- lems of nutrition are concerned with other factors than a mere sufficiency of nitrogen or an adequate intake of potential energy the problems of interme- diary metabolism forced themselves upon the atten- tion of physiologists and led to a thorough apprecia- tion of the value in nutrition of factors previously entirely overlooked or considered of little or no moment. Reference to the table on p. 22 will bring out clearly the differences that exist between a few of the typical proteins. The most striking variations in amino acids from a quantitative viewpoint are evident. Such differences are undoubtedly of importance from a nutritional standpoint, but of much greater signifi- cance are the qualitative variations. To point out briefly the most evident of these it may be seen that NUTRITION AND GROWTH 137 albumin and casein are glycocoll-free. Gliadin from wheat contains no glycocoll and only a trace of lysine. Zein from maize yields no lysine nor tryptophane and gelatine contains no cystine, tyrosine nor tryptophane. The first appreciation that qualitative differences in protein composition may be of importance in nutri- tion was furnished by the classic experiments of Voit and Munk, who showed that gelatin could not support nitrogen equilibrium. The demonstration by Escher that the addition of tyrosine improved the powers of gelatin in establishing nitrogenous equilibrium gave rise to a series of investigations, the results of which have led to a much more complete understanding of the problems intimately connected with metabolism. Only a few of these, however, need be reviewed here. Kaufman was able to show that when gelatin is fed to man and dogs with the addition of the missing amino acids, tyrosine and tryptophane, nitrogen equi- librium could be maintained for short periods at least. The work of Willcock and Hopkins with zein, which it will be refaembered is deficient in lysine and tryp- tophane, is of great interest in the present discussion as it attacked the problem from new viewpoints, in entire accord with the conceptions of the present. In their introduction these authors point out that: "We are no longer bound to Liebig's view, or to any modi- fication of it which implies that the* whole of the protein consumed is utilized as intact protein : nor are we even compelled to assume that the whole of what is broken down in the gut is resynthesized^ before 138 THE AMINO ACIDS utilization. Protein products may function in other ways than in the repair of tissues or in supplying energy. It is highly probable that the organism uses them, in part, for more specific and more immediate needs. The discovery of substances absolutely essen- tial to life, highly specific, and elaborated in special organs, suggests that some part, at least, of the pro- tein products set free in the gut may be used directly by these organs as precursors of such specific sub- stances. In adrenaline, for instance, we have an aro- matic substance absolutely essential for the mainten- ance of life, and it is probable that the suprarenal gland requires a constant supply of some one of the aromatic groups of the protein molecule to serve as an indispensable basis for the elaboration of adrena- line. If this be so, it is certain that the gland itself could not, in starving animals, supply sufficient of such a precursor to outlast the observed survival periods. Since adrenaline must be produced at all costs, the required precursor must, in starvation, be obtained by tissue breakdown outside the gland. We may be sure, however, that adrenaline is far from being the only substance elaborated to which such considerations apply. Similarly, in an animal upon a diet sufficient to supply energy, but lacking in some essential group, the minimal waste in the general tissues of the body will be determined by the special need of the organs for the missing group. On this basis we have a hypoth- esis to account for the special protein-sparing prop- erties of gelatin. It shares with protein certain NUTRITION AND GROWTH 139 molecular groupings needed to satisfy specific needs, and is thus superior to fats and carbohydrates as a protein-sparer: it lacks, on the other hand, certain necessary groupings, fails therefore to supply all such needs, and thus cannot replace protein." These considerations served as the basis for the experiments described by Willcock and Hopkins. Mice kept under exactly similar conditions were fed with a diet having zein as its source of nitrogen. In certain instances small quantities of tyrosine or tryptophane were added to the dietary. The results of the influ- ence of such diets were measured by the "survival period" — that is, the period necessary to cause the death of the animal. In Fig. 1 is reproduced a dia- gram illustrating very clearly the influence of tryp- tophane upon the survival period. With zein as the only nitrogenous component of the diet young mice were shown to be unable to maintain growth. Tryp- tophane addition does not make zein capable of main- taining growth, but does greatly prolong the survival period. In Fig. 1 the survival periods of mice fed upon zein alone are not given, for they were identical with those obtained with mice fed zein plus tyrosine. Although added tyrosine exerted no influence .upon the survival period, it must not be inferred that this amino acid is without specific effect on metabolism: it evidently played little role here because zein fed supplied sufficient tyrosine, hence an excess was with- out special influence. In reality tyrosine was added as a control to tryptophane addition, in order to determine 4 8 12 N* 20-24 28325S40444J FIGURE 1. The thick lines show the survival periods (in days) of t\ individual mice upon the zein diet with tyrosine added. The thin lines same for nineteen mice upon the zein diet with tryptophane added. [ Journal of Physiology , volume 35.] NUTRITION AND GROWTH 141 whether addition of any amino acid would produce an effect, and hence, therefore, to find out directly the specific action of tryptophane. A prominent feature in connection with the mice given zein alone was a condition of torpor; the mice were very inactive and made no movement when handled or touched, the ears, feet, and tail were cold, the coat was glairy and the eyes were half-closed. Those fed tryptophane with zein showed a strikingly different behavior, being active and apparently healthy even up to the end of life. In both instances death was not caused by a lack of food intake, as all animals gave evidence of appetite. Quantitatively, sufficient food was received but qualitatively something essen- tial to life was lacking. It is possible that had lysine, the other amino acid lacking in zein, been fed also, even better results would have been obtained. Tryp- tophane undoubtedly is essential for the maintenance of life, although the specific role it plays has not yet been determined. As the authors mentioned above point out, "If it [tryptophane] serves as a basis for the elaboration of a substance absolutely necessary for life — something, for instance, of an importance equal to that of adrenaline — then, in starvation, or when it is absent from the diet, a supply is likely to be maintained from the tissue-proteins, the demand for it would become one of the factors determining tissue breakdown. In the case of young animals which directly benefit from the addition of a protein con- stituent otherwise absent from their diet, to the extent \ 142 THE AMINO ACIDS of a well-nigh doubled life, and lose, instead of gaming, weight, the utilization of the constituent would seem to be of some direct and specific nature." These words give the first definite suggestion that individual amino acids may play a specific role in the maintenance of nutritional rhythm. The failure of zein as a suitable source for the essential nitrogen requirement leads to the query whether any single protein will suffice in this respect. Attempts to answer this question have been many and it is only recently that a satisfactory positive reply has been given. In many of the older experiments lack of success has been attributed to various factors other than the character of the protein, and where appar- ently successful results have been obtained criticism has been pertinent in that, in most instances, the protein or proteins employed have not been free from impuri- ties. The general impression gained from this type of investigation has been that sooner or later animals die when kept for a prolonged period upon a con- stant diet even though an abundance of energy producing material may be present. A so-called "pure" diet has been deemed impracticable. Lunin, one of the early investigators of the problem, fed mice with mixtures of casein, fat, cane sugar, and milk ash. On this artificial diet death occurred in from twenty to thirty days, a survival period greater than when the ash of milk was omitted. Mice fed dried milk were alive at the end of two months. Hall with mice and Steinitz with dogs obtained comparable NUTRITION AND GROWTH 143 results when a similar form of dietary was used. By considerable variation in the non-nitrogenous portion of the food Rohmann showed that mice will thrive for weeks. A criticism of these experiments is that the range of variation in the make-up of the dietary resulted really in furnishing the animals an ordinary mixed diet. The experiments of Jacob with pigeons, of Falta and Noeggerath, and of Knapp with rats demonstrated that variety in the dietary undoubtedly tends toward prolongation of life but that death eventually ensues. After experiencing many failures, Osborne and Mendel have succeeded in maintaining white rats for long periods of time upon single, pure, isolated pro- teins, growth also being at a normal rate. They attributed their success to the addition to the dietary of what they term "protein-free milk." This is pre- pared by removing the protein and fat from milk, leaving the milk sugar, inorganic salts and the un- known components. "Protein-free milk" always con- tains very small quantities of protein but not enough to support life. They have also demonstrated that by artificially imitating the composition of "protein- free milk" by union of the various ions fairly success- ful results have been obtained. It is therefore pos- sible to construct a dietary in such a manner from purified isolated foodstuffs and artificial salt mixtures that animals may not only be maintained but normal growth may also be induced. In their work, Osborne and Mendel differentiate 144 THE AMINO ACIDS sharply between a maintenance diet and one capable of promoting growth. They have shown, for example, that a young animal may be maintained on a certain diet indefinitely without manifesting any tendency .to grow. From the work of Donaldson it has been dem- onstrated that the life span of the white rat is about three years. Sexual maturity is reached in sixty days. The first year of life for the rat corresponds to the first thirty years of human life, and the curve of growth for this period is reproduced below. Fig. 2. As an illustration of the influence of an isolated protein, casein (fed with starch, sugar, agar, lard, and a salt mixture), the chart, Fig. 3, is shown. It is evident that casein as the sole source of nitrogen was apparently incapable of allowing normal growth in a young rat during a period of forty-six days. In other words, stunting occurred. In period 2, casein and sugar were replaced by milk. Growth was resumed. The influence of changing the salt mixture content of the food intake is quite evident in periods 3, 4, and 5. The ability of milk to furnish the necessary nitrogen requirement is well shown in the chart, Fig. 4, the curve obtained being to all intents and purposes identical with the normal growth curve. If to the casein diet "protein-free milk" is added, instead of whole milk replacing casein, normal condi- tions obtain as is well illustrated in the chart, Fig. 5. Casein alone was found to be .unable to support growth. In Fig. 6 is shown a curve in which, during period 2, casein was the only source of protein and 300 280 260 240 220 200 180 160 140 120 100 80 60 o*r 7 20 0 20 40 6O 100 120 140 160 180 FIGURE 2 shows average normal rates of growth of male ) andi 220 E40 260 280 300 320 340 360 360 tfemale white rats according to Donaldson and to Osborne Wei. F — Casein food 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 '80 200 2 FIGURE 3. GROWTH CURVE veight -Milk food >40 260 280 300 320 3*0 360 380 400 4EO 440 460 i CASEIN AND MILK DIETS. NUTRITION AND GROWTH 145 as a result a decline set in, which could not be checked by doubling the percentage of casein in the diet. That lack of protein can not account for the decline is well shown in period 4, during which the original amount zzo 200 ISO 160 140 120 100 /•terminated Milk food 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 Days FIGURE 4. GROWTH CURVE WITH MILK DIET. of casein was replaced and "protein-free milk" was also added. An immediate response in appetite was evidenced and speedy recuperation and growth were in order. This experiment demonstrates that a rat unable to maintain itself on an isolated protein may be caused 146 THE AMINO ACIDS to speedily resume a normal condition by the addition to the diet of "protein-free milk." From these and many similar results it is apparent that if suitable non-protein constituents of the dietary 210 190 l"7f") / X / / / Xs / / / fa X »50 m > / / e, / %' ll F -• ra*« (to food ^-s\^ ri asein + l rotein-f ree Tiilk » £ -\ I V V ****\ 2 0 20 40 60 80 100 »20 >*0 160 189 Days FIGURE 5. MAINTENANCE ON CASEIN AND GROWTH AFTER ADDITION OF PROTEIN-FREE MILK. are supplied, such as are furnished by "protein-free milk" maintenance and growth in white rats may be normal. Emphasis should therefore be laid upon the importance of the role played by the accessory food- stuffs, as contained in "protein-free milk" the nature I c 1 is § § § § -iL Tu^jQ 148 THE AMINO ACIDS of which remains obscure. It is also evident that the establishment of a satisfactory non-protein dietary affords an opportunity for the study of any specific influence which a peculiar type of protein, or one with an unusual type of internal structure, may exert in nutrition. / In addition to casein Osborne and Mendel have f demonstrated that perfectly satisfactory results may be yielded when other types of pure proteins are 'I employed, a single one sufficing for all the nitrogen / requirements of white rats. Thus, adequate growth * has been secured with lactalbumin from cow's milk, ovalbumin from hen's egg, ovovitellin from hen's egg, edestin from hemp seed, cannabin from hemp seed, glu- tenin from wheat, glycinin from the soy bean, globulin from squash seed, globulin from cotton seed, excelsin from Brazil nut, and glutelin from maize. Taking advantage of the opportunity afforded them, the above mentioned authors have studied the influ- ence which a peculiar protein, for example, one lack- ing one or more important amino acid, may exert in nutritional processes. It soon became evident that all proteins do not promote growth under otherwise favorable conditions. Gliadins of rye and wheat, which are deficient in glycocoll and lysine and on the other hand are very rich in glutamic acid, and hordein of barley, which closely resembles gliadin in chemical constitution, are capable of giving maintenance, but fail to induce growth. A condition of stunting is brought about, old animals retaining the characteris- NUTRITION AND GROWTH 149 tics of well-nourished young rats. In Fig. 7 are re- produced curves which show the failure of a rat to present normal growth on a diet containing protein- free milk and gliadin as the only protein. The I4fi X X" X v /' 80 *f if P. r> / 4O y Body > ^ — ^ ?rt *~c " •»— .— TOOC eaten I I G 13dm* P otein-f eemiik • • — * d ^0 40 • 60 Days 80 100 FIGURE 7. FAILURE OF GROWTH ON GLIADIN PLUS PROTEIN-FREE MILK. frontispiece shows the photograph of this rat (B) and as a contrast that of a rat (A) of the same age presenting normal growth, together with a pho- tograph of a rat (C) of the same weight as (B) but much younger. This stunting is apparently a method 150 THE AMINO ACIDS which may be employed for the attainment of a type of animal infantilism. In connection with the sub- ject of stunting it became of interest to determine whether this condition would remain permanent under all circumstances or whether a return to a diet con- taining a more typical protein than gliadin would also cause a resumption of growth. Fig. 8 shows the slight growth of a young white rat during 276 days I of gliadin feeding. That the capacity to grow had not been lost, but was merely inhibited, may be seen in the second part of the curve in which milk food replaced the gliadin. At the beginning of the milk food diet the rat was 314 days old, an age at which rats usually show very little growth. Fertility is not impaired by the act of stunting, as may be seen from the curve in Fig. 9, for this rat, after a period of 154 days with gliadin as its protein supply, was mated and produced four young, which were suckled during the first month of their existence by the mother who was still maintained upon a gliadin diet. These young rats presented normal growth curves during this period. When a month old, three of the young ani- mals were removed from the mother and kept upon diets of casein, edestin, and milk food. All showed normal curves of growth. The fourth young rat, kept with the mother began to exhibit a failure to grow as soon as forced to depend upon the gliadin food mixture. Inasmuch as casein, which has been proved to be efficient as a source of nitrogen for both maintenance and growth, is lacking in glycocoll, le -Gl •free 60 60 140 160 zzo FIGURE 8. This figure shows failure of rat to make more than slight at a normal rate after 276 days of stunting. At this time the rat was 314 d Biological Chemistry, volume 12.] V ilk f,od 300 3ZO 340 ibO 380 4-00 420 460 480 I diet containing gliadin as the sole protein, and capacity to resume growth l,ge at which rats normally grow very little more. [From the Journal o) -Gliad e milk I «j* 20 80 100 FIGURE 9 shows maintenance and fertility on a diet containing gliadin as e protein. After 154 days this rat was paired, four young being the resuli mating. [From the Journal of Biological Chemistry, volume 12.] 152 THE AMINO ACIDS whereas gliadin is deficient in glycocoll and lysine and fails to promote growth, it is reasonable to assume that the low content of lysine in gliadin is responsible for the failure of white rats to grow. On the other hand, lysine is apparently not essential for mere main- tenance. Another conclusion which may be drawn from these experiments is that the organism is unable to synthesize lysine, although glycocoll may be syn- thesized with apparent ease, as has been shown in previous pages of this book. Growth means the for- mation of new tissues and in the absence of sufficient lysine the construction of new tissue does not occur readily, or at least proceed at the normal rate. The inference that lysine is concerned with the function of growth may be tested from another viewpoint. If the animals fed with gliadin, lacking in lysine, show a failure to grow the addition of lysine to gliadin should be followed by a resumption of normal growth. Such trials have been made by Osborne and Mendel and the results obtained are most strikingly seen in the following curves. [See Fig. 10.] Failure to grow on gliadin as the sole protein is first shown in the curves followed by a period of growth when lysine was added to the diet. The subsequent with- drawal of the lysine is followed in each instance by a cessation of growth. If lysine is added again growth is again resumed at a normal, to cease again when lysine is taken away. These results lead to the con- clusion that lysine is indispensable for the functions of growth. Data collected by Osborne and Mendel M ,47 5 i L \51 \7IO \ s70( \49C v647 \p4/( V52/<; \ Ze/n Food Days FIGURE 11. EXPERIMENTS WITH ZEIN. Neither growth nor main- tenance can be secured when zein is the sole protein in the dietary. [From the Journal of 'Biological Chemistry, volume 17.] NUTRITION AND GROWTH 155 reveal the "Ideologically interesting fact . . . that those proteins, like casein, lactalbumin, and egg vitellin, which are in nature concerned with the growth of animals, all show a relatively high content of lysine." The experience of these investigators with zein, which lacks glycocoll, tryptophane and lysine, has brought to light the fact that tryptophane is undoubt- edly essential for maintenance and emphasizes anew the significance of lysine as a growth promoting sub- stance. One may also assume that a little lysine is necessary for maintenance and this is ordinarily sup- plied in sufficient amount by the traces in gliadin or (in the zein and tryptophane experiments) by traces in protein-free milk protein or from the tissues them- selves. In an earlier portion of this chapter were pointed out in some detail the experiments of Will- cock and Hopkins with zein, with and without addi- tion of tryptophane. They found that zein as the only protein in the dietary cannot maintain growth in the young animal nor even support life. The addi- tion of tryptophane resulted in prolonging life with- out causing a resumption of the growth impulse. The outcome of the work of Osborne and Mendel with zein alone is best shown in the chart, Fig. 11. The large number of experiments shown here yielded concordant results and show that neither maintenance nor growth can be secured when zein is the only pro- tein ingested. When tryptophane is added to the zein food mixture, maintenance of body weight follows, as may be seen from Fig. 12. Addition of both trypto- 156 THE AMINO ACIDS FIGURE 12. INDISPENSABILITY OF TRYPTOPHANE FOR MAIN- TENANCE IN NUTRITION. These experiments should be contrasted with the failure of maintenance on zein-food alone, shown in figure 11. [From the Journal of Biological Chemistry, volume 17.] phane and lysine results in the establishment of perfect maintenance and growth. [See Fig. 13.] It may be inferred from these experiments then that tryptophane is indispensable for maintenance in nutrition and that the animal organism does not possess the ability to synthesize this amino acid. That lysine cannot replace tryptophane in the establishment of the condition of Days FIGURE 13. GROWTH ON FOODS CONTAINING ZEIN+TRYPTOPHANE -j- LYSINE. The growth obtained on this diet may be contrasted with maintenance without growth in the absence of the lysine (see Figure 12) and/ailure to be maintained in the absence of both lysine and tryptophane (Figure 11), thus demonstrating the r61e of these amino acids in growth and maintenance respectively. That lysine cannot replace tryptophane in maintenance is shown by Rat 1900. [From the Journal of Biological Chemistry, volume 17.] 158 THE AMINO ACIDS maintenance, may be seen from the chart, Fig. 13. Rat 1900. Investigation of this type into the biochemical de- portment of the protein cleavage products will un- doubtedly lead ultimately to the assignment of more or less specific functions to the various amino acids, and hence will indirectly indicate the relative efficiency of this or that protein in bringing about a desired result in nutrition. REFERENCES TO LITERATURE Mendel: Nutrition and Growth: Journal of the American Medical Association. 1915, 64, p. 1539. Osborne and Mendel: Journal Biological Chemistry. 1914, 17, p. 325. Willcock and Hopkins: Journal of Physiology. 1906, 35, p. 88. INDEX INDEX Absorption, from intestine, 48. from large intestine, 56. from stomach, 46, 47. of amino acids, 47, 54, 56. of amino acids by rectum, 131. of amino acids by tissues, 76. of fat, 53. of proteoses and pep- tones, 52, 56. of putrefactive products, 56. of undigested protein, 48. Accessory foodstuffs, 146. Acetic acid, 101. Acetone, 101. Acid, acetic, 101. aspartic, 16. caseinic, 18. glutamic, 16. hippuric, 108. homogentisic, 106, 115. isovaleric, 100. lactic, 111, 112, 113. nucleic, 7. uric, 93. Acids, amino, 12. diamino, 21. hydroxy, 38. Acids, ketone, 100. monoamino, 21. Adrenaline, see also Epine- phrine, 138, 141. Alanine, 13. amounts of, in proteins, 22,23. dextrose formation from, 111. formation from glycogen, 113. in blood, 55. Albuminates, 9. ' Albuminoids, 6. Albumins, 4, 5. Alcohol-soluble proteins, 4, 5. Alkaptonuria, 114. Amides, as foodstuffs, 131. Amines, 40. fate of, 57. Amino acid, definition of, 12. metabolism, anomalies of, 114. Amino acids, 12. absorption of, 54, 56, 76. absorption of, by rectum, 131. action of intestinal bac- teria upon, 38. 162 INDEX Amino acids, as foodstuffs, 126, 131. as functional test of liver, 71. as protein sparers, 127. content of, in tissues, 77, 78, 79. deficiencies of, in gliadin, 148. deficiencies of, in zein, 155. description of, 12. fate of, in tissues, 76. formation of carbohy- drates from, 109. formation of, from car- bohydrates, 113. formation of, in gastric digestion, 31. formation of, in intestinal digestion, 35. formulas of, 12. further fate of, 99. in blood, 55, 73, 75, 78. in digestion, 28, 29. in duodenal contents, 35. in intermediary metabo- lism, 78. in maintenance and growth, 148. mono, 21. quantitative yields from proteins, 22. relationship of different, 19. Amino acids, relation of, to specific dynamic action, 123. specific role of, in nutri- tion and growth, 136. synthesis of, 107, 132, 134. synthesis of, to protein, 77. Ammonia, 93. amounts of, in proteins, 22, 23. in intestinal putrefaction, 39. Ammonium salts, as food- . stuffs, 131. Amounts of amino acids yielded by proteins, 22. Anabolism, 81. Animal infantilism, 150. Anomalies of amino acid metabolism, 114. Arginase, 71. Arginine, 17. amounts of, in proteins, 22, 23. catabolism of, 106. dextrose formation from, 112. fate of, in putrefaction, 44. in blood, 55. urea from, 71. Arbacin, 6. Artificial foodstuffs, value of, in nutrition, 143. INDEX 163 Artificial production of foodstuffs, 130. Asparagine, food value of, 132. Aspartic acid, 16. amounts of, in proteins, 22, 23. dextrose formation from, 112. in blood, 55. Bacterial digestion and amino acids, 36. /3-iminazolylethylamine, 43. /3-oxybutyric acid, 102. Blood, amino acids in, 55, 73, 75. fate of amino acids in, 76. non-coagulable protein, 60. non-protein nitrogen of, 55. proteose of, 50. proteoses and peptones in, 59. seromucoid in, 61. Cadaverine, 43, 147. Cannabin, growth with, 148. Carbohydrate, formation of amino acids from, 113. formation of, from amino acids, 109. "Carbon moiety" of protein, 110. Casein, as sole protein of diet, 144. Caseinic acid, 18. amount in casein, 22. Catabolism, 81. of amino acids, 99. Circulating protein, 84. Classification of proteins, 3. Clupein, 6. Coagulated proteins, 9. Coagulation of protein, 2. Colloids, 2. Conjugated proteins, 4, 7. Creatinine, 92. Cresol, 38. Cystine, 15. absence of, in gelatin, 137. amounts of, in proteins, 22, 23. excretion of, in cystinu- ria, 117. Cystinuria, 116. Deamination, 70, 71, 72, 99, 100, 101. Derived proteins, 4, 8. Dextrose, formation of, from amino acids, 111, 112. Diacetic acid, 104. Diamines, 43, 117. Diamino acids, 21. Diaminuria, 116. Diet, variety in, 143. Digestion, a hydrolytic pro- cess, 29. and amino acids, 28. 164 INDEX Edestin, growth with, 148. Endogenous metabolism, 95. Enzymes, in blood after protein injections, 51, 61. in protein synthesis, 67, 69. Epinephrine, see also Adrenaline, 41. Erepsin, 34. Ethereal sulphates, 94. Excelsin, growth with, 148. Excretion of putrefactive products, 56. Exogenous metabolism, 95. Fertility, and stunting, 150. influence of gliadin on, 150. Fibrin, 9. Fibrinogen, 9. Foodstuffs, amides as, 131. amino acids as, 126, 131. ammonium salts as, 131. artificial production of, 130. value of artificial, in nu- trition, 143. Gaduhiston, 6. Gastric digestion, impor- tance of, 32. products of, 30, 31, 32. relation of, to amino acid formation, 32. Gelatin, absence of certain amino acids in, 137. Gelatin, as a protein sparer, 138. nutritive value of, 137. Gliadin, 5. deficiency of amino acids in, 148. influence of, on fertility, 150. influence of, on growth, 150. yield of lysine and glyco- coll, 137. Globin, 6. Globulins, 4, 5. growth with, 148. Glucosamine, 7. Glucoproteins, 7. Glutamic acid, 16. amounts of, in proteins, 22, 23. dextrose formation from, 112. in blood, 55. in gliadin, 148. Glutelin, growth with, 148. Glutelins, 4, 5. Glutenin, 5. growth with, 148. Glycinin, growth with, 148. Glycocoll, 12. absence of, in gliadins, 137, 148. amounts of, in proteins, 22, 23. dextrose formation from, 111. INDEX 165 Glycocoll, in blood, 55. synthesis of, 108. Glycogen, 109. formation of alanine from, 113. Growth, and maintenance, 143. influence of lysine upon, 152, 155, 156. influence of milk food upon, 144. influence of tryptophane upon, 155, 156. influence of zein upon, 139, 155. specific role of amino acids in nutrition and, 136. with various proteins, 148. Heat production, and me- tabolism, 89. Hemocyanin, 8. Hemoglobins, 8. Heredity, in alkaptonuria, 115. in cystinuria, 117. Heterocyclic compounds, 21. Hippuric acid, 108. Histamine, 43. Histidine, 17. amounts of, in proteins, 22, 23. fate of, in putrefaction, 42, 43. in blood, 55. Histones, 6. Homogentisic acid, 106. relation of, to tyrosine and phenylalanine, 115. Hydrolysis, of protein, 11. Hydroxy acids, 38, 39. Indole, 39. ethylamine, 42. Inorganic sulphates, 93. Intestinal digestion, 33. relation of, to amino acid formation, 34. Intestinal work, influence of, in specific dynamic action, 112. Isoamylamine, 42. Isoleucine, 14. amounts of, in proteins, 22, 23. Isovaleric acid, 100. Ketone acids, 100. Lactalbumin, growth with, 148. Lactic acid, 111, 112, 113. Lecithins, 8. Lecithoproteins, 8. Leucine, 13. amounts of, in proteins, 22, 23. catabolism of, 100. fate of, in putrefaction, 42. in blood, 55. Leucocytes, role of, in pro- tein synthesis, 66. 166 INDEX Liver, in amino acid metab- olism, 71. role of, in protein synthe- sis, 129. Lysine, 16. absence of, in zein, 137. amounts of, in proteins, 22, 23. inability of body to syn- thesize, 152. in blood, 55. influence of, on growth, 152, 155, 156. in gliadin, 137, 148. in maintenance, 156. Maintenance, and growth, 143. influence of lysine upon, 156. influence of tryptophane upon, 155, 156. influence of zein upon, 155. Metabolism, 81. and heat production, 89. of amino acids, 99. of plethora, 124. Metaproteins, 9. Milk, and growth, 144, 145. food, influence of, on stunting, 150. protein-free, 143, 144, 145, 149, 155. Monoamino acids, 21. Mucoids, in blood, 60, 61. Neutral sulphur, 93. Nitrogen, equilibrium, 97. form needed by body, 1. in protein, 1, 2. in tissue formation, 96. Norleucine, 14. Nucleic acid, 7. Nucleoproteins, 7. Nutrition, specific role of amino acids in, 136. Occurrence, and character- istics of proteins, 5. Organized protein, 84. Ornithine, 44. dextrose formation from, 112. Ovalbumin, growth with, 148. Ovovitellin, growth with, 148. Oxidative deamination, 99. Oxyproline, 18. amounts of, in proteins, 22, 23. p.oxyphenylethylamine, 40. Parenteral introduction of protein, fate of, 49. Peptides, 10, 26. Peptone, action of erepsin upon, 34. in gastric digestion, 31. Peptones, 10. in intestinal putrefaction, 37. INDEX 167 Phenol, 38. Phenylalanine, 14. amounts of, in proteins, 22, 23. catabolism of, 103. relation of, to homogen- tisic acid, 115, 116. Phosphoproteins, 7. Plastein formation, 68. Plastic foods, 84. Polypeptides, 10, 25. action of enzymes upon, 26. value of, in amino acid mixtures, 129. Proline, 17. amounts of, in proteins, 22, 23. dextrose formation from, 112. in blood, 55. Protamines, 6. Proteans, 8. Protein, action of enzymes in synthesis of, 67, 69. as a complex polypeptide, 26. definition of, 2. fate of ingested, 58. free milk, 143, 144, 145, 146, 149, 155. molecular weight of, 3. molecule, 2. molecule, structure of, 24. metabolism, theories of, 81. Protein, regeneration, place of, 62. sparers, 127, 132, 133, 138. synthesis, by intestinal bacteria, 133. synthesis, by intestine, 62. synthesis, from amino acids, by tissues, 78. synthesis, role of leuco- cytes in, 66. synthesis, role of liver in, 129. Proteins, and growth, 148. as colloids, 2. classification of, 3. characteristics of, 5. composition of, 2. conjugated, 4, 7. crystallization of, 2. derived, 4, 8. influence of, on plane of polarized light, 3. occurrence of, 5. quantities of amino acids yielded by, 22. simple, 4, 5. specific dynamic action of, 120. Proteose, in blood, 50. Proteoses, 9, 10. action of erepsin on, 34. and peptones, in blood, 59. in gastric digestion, 31. in intestinal putrefaction, 37. Ptomaines, 117. 168 INDEX "Pure" diets, 142. Purine bases, 7. Putrefaction, fate of argin- ine in, 44. fate of histidine in, 42, 43. fate of leucine in, 42. fate of tryptophane in, 39. fate of tyrosine in, 38. formation of ammonia in, 39. hydroxy acids in, 38. nature of, 36. products of intestinal, 38. proteoses and peptones in, 37. Putrescine, 43, 117. Pyrimidine bases, 7. Rate of blood flow, 73. Relationship of different amino acids, 19. "Residual nitrogen" of blood, 74. Respiratory foods, 84. Salmin, 6. Scombin,