232 ANIMAL FATS AND PHOSPHATIDES. 



in water, but with an alcoholic solution it saponifies readily, and the above-men- 

 tioned alcohols are set free. 



CH 3 



Ethal or cetyl alcohol, C 16 H 34 O. = (CH 2 ) H , which occurs in smaller quantities 



CH 2 .OH 



in beeswax, and was found by LUDWIG and v. ZEYNEK in the fat from dermoid 

 cysts though this is denied by AMESEDER/ forms white, transparent, odorless, 

 and tasteless crystals which are insoluble in water but dissolve easily in alcohol 

 and ether. Ethal melts at 49.5 C. 



SPERMACETI-OIL yields on saponification valeric acid, small amounts of 

 solid fatty acids, and PHYSETOLEIC ACID. This acid, which has, like hypoga?ic 

 acid, the composition C 16 H 30 O 2 , occurs also, as found by LjUBARSKY, 2 in con- 

 siderable amounts in the fat of the seal. It forms colorless and odorless needle- 

 shaped crystals which easily dissolve in alcohol and ether and melt at 34 C. 



BEESWAX may be treated here as concluding the subject of fats. It con- 

 tains three chief constituents: (1) CEROTIC ACID, C 2 6H 52 02, 3 which occurs as cetyl 

 ether in Chinese wax and as free acid in ordinary wax. It dissolves in boiling 

 alcohol and separates as crystals on cooling. The cooled alcoholic extract of 

 wax contains (2) CEROLEIN, which is probably a mixture of several bodies, and 

 (3) MYRICIN,, which forms the chief constituent of that part of wax which is 

 insoluble in warm or cold alcohol. Myricin consists chiefly of palmitic-acid 

 ester of rnelissyl (myricyl) alcohol, C 30 H 61 .OH. This alcohol is a silky, shining, 

 crystalline body melting at 85 C, DUNHAM 4 has found carnaubic acid, C 24 H 48 O 2 , 

 in a phosphatide from the ox kidney. 



2. Phosphatides. 



In close relation to the fats stands a group of esters containing 

 nitrogen, phosphoric acid and fatty acid radicals. The representative 

 of this group longest known is lecithin. This latter is an ester combina- 

 tion of a nitrogenous base, choline, with a fatty acid-glycerophosphoric 

 acid, and TnuDicnuM 5 has shown that a large number of more or less 

 analogous bodies occur in the animal body, especially in the brain. 

 All of these bodies have received the name phosphatides. 



Those phosphatides which contain only one phosphoric acid radical 

 in the molecule are called monophosphatides', those with two such radicals 

 diphosphatides. The monophosphatides may contain one, two or more 

 atoms of nitrogen in the molecule, and hence we differentiate between 

 monamido- (P : N = 1 : 1) , diamido- (P : N = 1 : 2) , triamido- (P : N = 1 : 3) 

 monophosphatides, etc. The lecithin group belongs to the monamido- 

 monophosphatides. The diamidomonophosphatides have been found, 

 besides in the brain, by THUDICHUM, in the bile (HAMMARSTEN), in the 



1 Ludwig and v. Zeynek, Zeitschr. f. physiol. Chem. 23; Ameseder, ibid., 52. 



2 Journ. f. prakt. Chem. (N. F.), 57. 



3 See Henriques, Ber. d. deutsch. chem. Gesellsch., 30, 1415. 



4 Journ. of biol. Chem., 4. 



5 J. L. W. Thudichum, Die chemische Konstitution des Gehirns des Menschen, etc.,. 

 Tubingen, 1901. 



