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Synthesis of the anhydrides of α-aminoacyl glucosamines
Author(s) -
Charles Weizmann,
Arthur Hopwood
Publication year - 1913
Publication title -
proceedings of the royal society of london series a containing papers of a mathematical and physical character
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2053-9150
pISSN - 0950-1207
DOI - 10.1098/rspa.1913.0043
Subject(s) - chemistry , glucosamine , sodium hydroxide , hydrochloride , amino acid , organic chemistry , aqueous solution , hydrolysis , ammonia , condensation , biochemistry , thermodynamics , physics
The behaviour of the albumin glucosides and the mucus bodies known asmucins, mucinogens, mucoids , andhyalogens , on hydrolysis suggests the probability that these complex proteins would bear the same relation to the condensation products of the sugars or the amino-sugars with the amino-acids as the simpler proteins bear to the polypeptides. Consequently, the authors decided two years ago to make a start in the synthesis of the glucoproteins by preparing the condensation products of glucosamine with the amino-aliphatic acids, in order that their properties and behaviour towards ferments could be ascertained and compared with those of the degradation products of the glucoproteins and thereby throw some light on the constitution of these complex and important organic bodies. After many failures, the method of synthesis which we eventually adopted for the condensation of glucosamine with amino-aliphatic acids was somewhat similar to one of the methods employed by Emil Fischer and his co-workers in the synthesis of the polypeptides. In brief, the method consists in condensingα -bromoacyl haloids with glucosamine hydrochloride in the presence of sodium hydroxide, and then displacing the halogen in the resultingα -bromoacyl glucosamines by an amino-group through the action of cold aqueous ammonia, viz:-α -Bromoacyl Haloid + Glucosamine Hydrochloride. sodium ↓ hydroxide.α -Bromoacyl Glucosamine. aqueous ↓ ammonia. Anhydride ofα -Aminoacyl Glucosamine.

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