
Crystalline vitamin D
Author(s) -
F. A. Askew,
R. B. Bourdillon,
H. M. Bruce,
R. K. Callow,
J. St. L. Philpot,
T. A. Webster
Publication year - 1932
Publication title -
proceedings of the royal society of london. series b, containing papers of a biological character
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2053-9185
pISSN - 0950-1193
DOI - 10.1098/rspb.1932.0008
Subject(s) - ergosterol , chemistry , vitamin , irradiation , product (mathematics) , chromatography , polymer science , mathematics , physics , biochemistry , nuclear physics , geometry
In two earlier papers in these ‘Proceedings’ (Askewet al ., 1930,a ; Anguset al ., 1931) a crystalline antirachitic substance was described, obtained by vacuum distillation of the products of irradiation of ergosterol. In the second paper, the physical properties and antirachitic activities of a number of successive preparations of this product were recorded, and it was shown that these were sufficiently constant to suggest that it consisted mainly of one substance. We avoided the conclusions that it was yet pure, the properties showing distinct variations which suggested that other, and presumably inactive, substances were present to a variable extent. For convenience, and with reference to its conspicuous biochemical activity, we provisionally applied the name “calciferol” to this crystalline product of distillation. We realised, however, that the substance to which that name could be properly and definitely applied, as being the pure antirachitic vitamin, might differ to some extent from the product then described. Among other indications in that direction was the fact biological activity of this product was not greatly in excess of that shown by many samples of the crude irradiation product. It was indeed suggested that the irradiation mixture might contain more than one active substance (cp . Billset al. , 1931). Since that second publication, progress has been rapid in more than one laboratory. A few weeks later Windaus (1931) gave, at a discussion meeting of the Royal Society, a preliminary description of a crystalline product which he had separated after partial condensation of the mixed products of irradiation with maleic or citraconic anhydride (Diels’ reaction). Its melting-point, absorption and antirachitic activity were practically identical with those of our product, but its optical dextrorotation was so much lower that the two preparations could not be identical.