AND J. CHURCHMAN, B.Sc.THE passage of amino-acids across the placenta has been studied for many years. Morel and Mouriquand (1 9 13), using the Van Slyke (1 9 12) method of amino-acid estimation, found no difference between human foetal and maternal whole blood amino-acid levels, and were thus able to postulate simple diffusion of amino-acids across the placenta. Rabinovitch (1914), using the same method, found the foetal to exceed the maternal levels.Morse (1917) studied 17 pregnant women, and found a higher level of presumed amino-acid nitrogen in plasma from the umbilical cord than in the maternal plasma. His mean values, using the gasometric nitrous acid method of Van Slyke (1912) which estimates all primary aliphatic amines, were 6 . 4 mg./100 ml. in the maternal and 8 -7 mg./100 ml. in the foetal plasma. Hellmuth (1924) and Plass and Matthew (1925), using the Fohn (1922) method, also found higher foetal than maternal plasma levels, suggesting either a diffusion gradient from foetus to mother, or an active process involved in the transfer of amino-acids from mother to foetus. Luck and Engle (1929) disputed this evidence, and revived the simple diffusion theory.Settlement of this question awaited the development by Hamilton and Van Slyke (1943) of an analytical method which was more specific for amino-acids. Christensen and Streicher (1948), using this manometric ninhydrin method, showed that the amino-acid level of foetal plasma was considerably higher than that of the mother, foetal/maternal ratios being 5/1 for the J . biol. Chem., 149, 255. Chem., 150, 231.C. (1951): Human Biol., 23, 61.
88,230.Paris, 75, 643. Brit. Emp., 58, 701. Hopk. Hosp., 36, 393.
Gynaec.