Asparagine was first isolated in 1806 in a crystalline form by French chemists
Louis Nicolas Vauquelin and
Pierre Jean Robiquet (then a young assistant). It was isolated from
asparagus juice, in which it is abundant, hence the chosen name. It was the first amino acid to be isolated. Three years later, in 1809, Pierre Jean Robiquet identified a substance from
liquorice root with properties which he qualified as very similar to those of asparagine, and which
Plisson identified in 1828 as asparagine itself. The determination of asparagine's structure required decades of research. The
empirical formula for asparagine was first determined in 1833 by the French chemists Antoine François Boutron Charlard and
Théophile-Jules Pelouze; in the same year, the German chemist
Justus Liebig provided a more accurate formula. In 1846 the Italian chemist
Raffaele Piria treated asparagine with
nitrous acid, which removed the molecule's
amine (–NH2) groups and transformed asparagine into
malic acid. This revealed the molecule's fundamental structure: a chain of four carbon atoms. Piria thought that asparagine was a diamide of malic acid; however, in 1862 the German chemist
Hermann Kolbe showed that this surmise was wrong; instead, Kolbe concluded that asparagine was an
amide of an amine of
succinic acid. In 1886, the Italian chemist Arnaldo Piutti (1857–1928) discovered a mirror image or "
enantiomer" of the natural form of asparagine, which shared many of asparagine's properties, but which also differed from it. Since the structure of asparagine was still not fully known – the location of the amine group within the molecule was still not settled – Piutti synthesized asparagine and thus published its true structure in 1888. == Structural function in proteins ==