The discovery and characterization of riboflavin.

Ann Nutr Metab

Nutrition Consultant, Cambridge, UK. christinaclewes @ btinternet.com

Published: April 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • The first yellow-green fluorescent pigment in milk was observed by chemist Alexander Wynter Blyth in 1872 and identified as riboflavin in the 1930s.
  • Interest in food factors grew after the discovery of thiamin (vitamin B1) in the 19th century, prompting researchers to search for other water-soluble vitamins, ultimately leading to the identification of riboflavin as part of the B2 complex.
  • Although riboflavin deficiency does not cause a classical nutritional disease, its growth-stimulating effects in young rats were crucial in its isolation and the recognition of its importance for human nutrition in 1939.

Article Abstract

The first observation of a pigment in milk with yellow-green fluorescence can be traced to the English chemist Alexander Wynter Blyth in 1872, but it was not until the early 1930s that the substance was characterized as riboflavin. Interest in accessory food factors began in the latter half of the 19th century with the discovery of the first vitamin, thiamin. Thiamin was water soluble and given the name vitamin B(1). However, researchers realized that there were one or more additional water-soluble factors and these were called the vitamin B-2 complex. The search to identify these accessory food factors in milk, whole wheat, yeast, and liver began in the early 1900s. As there is no classical nutritional disease attributable to riboflavin deficiency, it was the growth-stimulating properties of the food extracts given to young rats that provided the tool with which to investigate and eventually extract riboflavin. Riboflavin was the second vitamin to be isolated and the first from the vitamin B-2 complex; the essential nature of the vitamin as a food constituent for man was shown in 1939.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000343111DOI Listing

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