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monosodium glutamate
(redirected from glutamic acid)

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monosodium glutamate

White, crystalline powder, the sodium salt of glutamic acid (an amino acid found in proteins that plays a role in the metabolism of plants and animals). It has been shown to possess its own taste receptor, making it the fifth taste (see umami), alongside sweet, sour, acid, and salt. It is used to enhance the flavour of many packaged and ‘fast foods’, and in Chinese cooking. Ill effects may arise from its overconsumption, and some people are very sensitive to it, even in small amounts. It is commercially derived from vegetable protein. It occurs naturally in soybeans and seaweed.



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Whelan says glutamic acid and aspartic acid occur naturally in many foods, and there is no evidence that they are treated differently in the body when they are ingested as food additives.
Other molecules, such as the enzyme glutamic acid decarboxylase, may also play pivotal roles in this process, and any of these could become targets for new drugs.
The remaining 12 (alanine, asparagine, aspartic acid, cysteine, cystine, glutamic acid, glycine, proline, glutamine, arginine, serine, and tyrosine) are called "non-essential" not because we don't need them, but because our bodies can make them, if necessary.
 
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