Isolation from beer and structural determination of a potent stimulant of gastrin release

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Abstract

Beer was subjected to five successive chromatographic procedures to isolate the gastrin release-inducing activity, guided by bioassay of the fractions in anaesthetized Donryu rats. The procedures were: (1) hydrophobic interaction chromatography (aqueous effluent with an HP20 column); (2) weak cation-exchange chromatography (1 M acetic acid eluate with a CM Sephadex C-25 column); (3) gel filtration (methanol eluate with a Sephadex LH-20 column); (4) same as (2); (5) high-performance liquid chromatography (YMC-Pack ODS-AM with 7% acetonitrile-0.01 M HCl). The active component finally isolated had a specific activity ~10,000 times higher than that of beer. It was identified by means of mass, 1H- and 13C-nuclear magnetic resonance spectral analyses as N-methyltyramine (NMT). The dose of NMT giving maximal gastrin-releasing activity was 25 μg/kg, and the 50% effective dose was ~10 μg/kg on oral administration to rats. NMT was isolated and identified as a gastrin release inducer in beer. Its concentration in beer is sufficient to account for most of the activity of beer.

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Yokoo, Y., Kohda, H., Kusumoto, A., Naoki, H., Matsumoto, N., Amachi, T., … Nukaya, H. (1999). Isolation from beer and structural determination of a potent stimulant of gastrin release. Alcohol and Alcoholism, 34(2), 161–168. https://doi.org/10.1093/alcalc/34.2.161

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