Glutamate
— From Discovery To Global Product
Author: ChemViews
Published
Date: 19 July 2011
Source
/ Publisher: Chemistry - An Asian Journal/Wiley-VCH
Copyright: WILEY-VCH
Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim
In 1908 Professor Kikunae Ikeda
(1864—1936), College of Science, Tokyo Imperial University, Japan, isolated
glutamate, one of the natural amino acids, from seaweed broth. 2300 years
before this, Aristotle described the four tastes: sweet for sugar, salty for
sodium chloride, sour for acid, and bitter for alkaloids. The fifth taste, the
unami taste, is the indicator for proteins and nucleic acids.
Two other umami compounds were
isolated later in Japan.
Ikeda found that humans can sense
glutamate at a concentration as low as 0.01 % in water—far lower than the
detection limit of sodium chloride and sugar—and that it is essential for a
meal to taste good. He also found that sodium glutamate and sodium chloride
synergistically enhance the taste of a meal.
Parmigiano reggiano contains a large amount (1.7 wt %) of glutamate, matured tomato > 2 % of its dry weight, and half of the amino acid content in human breast milk is glutamate. Today it is known that humans have a glutamate-receptor protein on the surface of their tongue and stomach.
Parmigiano reggiano contains a large amount (1.7 wt %) of glutamate, matured tomato > 2 % of its dry weight, and half of the amino acid content in human breast milk is glutamate. Today it is known that humans have a glutamate-receptor protein on the surface of their tongue and stomach.
In 1909, in collaboration with
Ikeda, Saburosuke Suzuki started producing a seasoning on a commercial basis. A
century later “Ajinomoto” has developed into a global product, and is now used
by 800 million people in about 100 countries.
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