Abstract

Abstract N‐acetyl‐l‐glutamine, pyroglutamic acid, and the butyl ester of pyroglutamic acid were isolated in pure form from an aqueous extract of human brain. These compounds were isolated by combination of paper and ion exchange chromatography. The isolated substance identified as N‐acetyl‐l‐glutamine did not react with the ninhydrin reagent but yielded glutamic acid and ammonia upon acid hydrolysis. An acetyl hydrazide was identified by paper chromatography from hydrazinolysates of the isolated substance. The glutamic acid liberated by hydrolysis had the l‐configuration. The results of elementary analysis of the isolated compound were in full accord with the analysis calculated for synthetic N‐acetyl‐l‐glutamine. A large amount of pyroglutamic acid and a substance identical with the butyl ester of pyroglutamic acid were isolated in pure form. The results of our studies suggest that pyroglutamic and the butyl ester derivative were artifacts formed during the isolation and purification procedures.

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