HISTONES AND PROTAMINES. 109 



a substance as a histone with positiveness. The large content of basic 

 nitrogen and of arginine is not a sure point of difference between histones 

 and other bodies. Histone yields little more than 40 per cent basic 

 nitrogen, while a heteroproteose yields about the same, namely, 39 

 per cent. Histone yields 14-15.5 per cent arginine (gadushistone), 

 and the lotahistone only 12 per cent. The vegetable proteid excelsin 

 is just as rich in arginine, namely, 14.14 per cent (OSBORNE and CLAPP 1 ). 

 The characteristics of the histones, according to KOSSEL, are the above- 

 given reactions and the high amount of hexone bases, especially arginine. 

 The arginine nitrogen amounts to about 25 per cent of the total nitrogen, 

 the lysine N = 7-8.5 per cent and the histidine N = 1.8-4.5 per cent. No 

 proteids, with the exception of certain protamines, are known for the 

 present, which contain as much arginine and lysine as the histones. On 

 hydrolytic cleavage the histones, like other proteins, but unlike- the pro- 

 tamines, yield a large number of monamino-acids. ABDERHALDEN and 

 RoNA 2 obtained from thymus histone the following: leucine 11.8, 

 alanine 3.46, glycocoll 0.50, proline 1.46, phenylalanine 2.20, tyrosine 

 5.20, and glutamic acid 0.53 per cent. 



On pepsin digestion the histones, according to KOSSEL and PRINGLE 3 

 yield so-called histone-peptone, which also contains 25 per cent of the 

 total nitrogen as arginine nitrogen. This histone-peptone differs from 

 the protamines in not giving a precipitate with proteid in neutral or 

 ammoniacal solution, but is precipitated in neutral reactions by sodium 

 picrate. This property is used in its isolation. 



According to KOSSEL the histones are probably intermediate bodies 

 between the protamines and protein bodies on the demolition of the 

 latter, and if this be true, then it is not to be expected that a sharp dif- 

 ferentiation exists between histone and proteid, and for this reason it 

 is hardly possible for the present to give a precise definition for the 

 histones. 



Protamines. In close relation to the proteins stands a group of 

 substances, the protamines, discovered by MIESCHER, which are desig- 

 nated by KOSSEL as the simplest proteins or as the nucleus of the pro- 

 tein bodies. Thus far they have been found only in combination with 

 nucleic acids in fish spermatozoa, 4 and the investigations of KOSSEL and 

 WEISS S have shown that the material from which the protamines are 



1 Amer. Journ. of Physiol, 19 and 23. 



2 Zeitschr. f . physiol. Chem., 41. 

 Ibid., 49. 



4 Nelson, Arch. f. exp. Path. u. Pharm., 59, has recently shown that the body 

 Called by him thymamine and prepared from the thymus glands, is a protamine, still 

 he has not given sufficient evidence of the protamine nature of the substance. 



6 Zeitschr. f. physiol. Chem., 52. 



