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11.1: Prelude to Metabolism and the Vitamin Key

  • Page ID
    57628
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    Have you ever wondered about the first snake oil salesman? (Probably in the Garden of Eden after the unfortunate affair about the apple.) It’s hard to imagine a human society without someone promoting a product to ‘pep you up,’ ‘get rid of that tired run-down feeling.’ It used to be tonics sold door-to-door or at carnivals. Now it’s one dietary supplement or another.

    If there was a logic to a theory supporting dietary supplements for people on ample balanced diets, it might well have come from some of the history of vitamin deficiencies—where people have suffered from terrible weakness when their diets didn’t provide enough of one or more vitamins. If too little makes you weak, a lot will bring extra vigor, right? Well, no.

    It all comes back to that basic fact that energy comes from the sun, and to humans through food, not from vitamins themselves. Once one understands the process by which vitamins help make that energy source available, it’s easy to see what foods effectively do provide energy, and how to choose those that will indeed make us energetic.

    As the 19th century neared its close, nutrition science began a search for “the balanced diet.” This search confronted scientists with the most basic of nutrition mysteries: How does the body use nutrients it digests and absorbs from food, to sustain life?

    It seemed then that it shouldn’t take long to determine the ideal diet. After all, the scientists were sure that there were only four nutrients to balance—fat, protein, carbohydrate, and “ash.” However, the scientists soon found that these four nutrients alone do not sustain life.


    The term ash is still used in food analysis. It refers to what remains when a food is burned completely, and consists of the minerals in food.


    As we saw in Chapter 2, scientists discovered that there was something in a water extract of food that was essential to life (now known as water-soluble vitamins). Using fat solvents, they extracted from food the remaining missing nutrients (now known as fat-soluble vitamins).

    But what, they wondered, was in these extracts? What role did they play in the chemistry of life? How could they miraculously enable protein, fat, carbohydrates, and ash to sustain life? The unraveling of the answers to these questions—and some of the answers themselves—are recounted in this chapter.


    This page titled 11.1: Prelude to Metabolism and the Vitamin Key is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Judi S. Morrill via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.