!! spellx done 177 The Big Fuss Over MSG The Washington Post November 8, 1969 Monosodium Glutamate (MSG) is about the last substance in the world that any student of biochemistry would have expected to see under attack as a food additive. It is the sodium salt of glutamic acid, among the commonest of the amino acids, making up, for example, over a fifth of the composition of milk protein. However, it is not an essential part of the animal or human diet, but only because it is synthesized in large amounts within the body. Besides its role in the structure of proteins, glumatic acid is an important intermediate in metabolism, involved in basic reactions by which nitrogenous compounds are cycled. More recently, glumatic acid has been found to have a special role in the energy supply to the brain, where it is unusually abundant. Speculations based on this finding led to fruitless trials some years ago in which extra glumatic acid was fed to children of low or borderline intelligence without effect. For several decades, MSG has served as a flavor-enhancer for hamburger and the like; then it crept into baby foods, apparently more for the benefit of the mother's than the infant's gustatory enjoyment. The first reports that MSG might need some second thoughts came out as the near-joke of the "Chinese Restaurant Syndrome," a subjectively unpleasant reaction experienced by various people to a rather large doses like five grams of MSG in won-ton soup. Why some of us (like the writer) do not respond to moderate doses is unknown. That the reaction was unnoticed for so long should provoke us to wonder how many similar adverse reactions to common dietary substances remain to be discovered. Last May, Dr. John W. Olney of the Department of Psychiatry, Washington University Medical School, in St. Louis, reported that newborn mice suffered specific brain damage from injection with a very large dose of MSG, a level that would be equivalent to 35 grams in the adult. Subsequently rats, rabbits and one monkey were reported to show similar responses, mainly in the hypothalamus - a part of the brain concerned with the regulation of hormones, of temperature, and of body weight. Dr. Olney quite properly suggested that these findings invited a reconsideration of the use of MSG, particularly in baby foods. However, so long as only modest amounts of MSG are used, small in relation to the glutamic acid normally furnished by the rest of the diet, it is hard to see any basis of concern. On the other hand, MSG is entirely dispensable in infant diets - and together with salt and sucrose it may be suspected of setting up invidious tastes that at best do the young child no great advantage. The fuss about MSG as a food additive may be obscuring the deeper interest of Dr. Olney's finding. It is startling that a natural amino acid, even if only at high levels, can cause serious disease in a specific part of the brain--and it will be very surprising if this does not have important implications for both further research and in understanding some kinds of brain damage that may be related to "normal" glutamic acid metabolism without our knowing it. The toxicity of MSG reminds one of the effect of another amino acid, phenylalanine, that can only be observed in the rare genetic disease, PKU, which can often be treated by careful dietary control. We know very little about the blood levels of glutamic acid that may obtain in the fetus or in some infants under various conditions. We also have to look into the chance that other brain structures may be more sensitive to MSG overdosage at other stages of development. MSG toxicity may also be related to an imbalance of its concentration compared to other amino acids, or also to its conversion to GABA (gamma-amino-butyric acid), an important transmitter substance in the brain. Until we have answer to these questions, we should neither shrug off the possibility that Dr. Olney has discovered another important diet - related disease, nor be content with driving MSG out of baby foods as a real response to the challenges he has raised. ---------------------------------------------------------------------