Sundry researches in pharmacology; missing by a hair's breadth the identification of the benzoyl radical in 1830
Robiquet has analysed the chemical byproducts that could be obtained from a variety of plants: asparagus, madder root, as already mentioned, with the important associated discoveries, and also others, which mostly helped in consolidating the existence of some molecules in a wide range of plants. Thus, in 1809, Robiquet extracts from
liquorice root a sweetish matter which he dubs
glycyrrhizin, from
Glycirrhiza, the denomination of the genus to which belongs liquorice. He also obtained an oily fraction (0.8%), small quantities of a matter with properties of a gum, albuminic substances,
tannins,
starch, a yellowish dye, a fraction with bitter taste, and, as from asparagi, a fraction that can be crystallized and seemingly close to
asparagin, which it will be indeed proven to be in 1828 by
Plisson. Robiquet likewise analysed a variety of animal tissues. Thus in 1810, he isolated from
Lytta vesicatoria, an insect, a molecule that he calls
cantharidin, which he proves is the cause of the severe irritations and blisters provoked by that insect, and is present in a variety of unrelated species that use the molecule as a protection of their eggs from predation [1] (Two families of insects belonging to the order of
Coleoptera synthetase that molecule :
Meloidae and
Oedemeridae. The first family, to the which
Lytta vesicatoria belongs in the Lytta genus, is rich of several thousands of species) In fact, even back into the days of the early classical period civilizations of the western Mediterranean, some types of flies from Spain had a reputation for inducing aphrodisiac effects when used in preparations after having been desiccated. Cantharidin has never been proven to provide such collateral benefits, whereas Robiquet demonstrated it had very definite toxic and poisonous properties comparable in degree to that of the most violent poisons known in the 19th century, such as
strychnine. This particular study, that demonstrated, as early as in 1810, the possibility to separate, using "energetic" methods, a simple "principle" that was the actual effective fraction of a traditional natural compound obtained by "soft" methods has been exemplary for the burgeoning community of chemists in the early 19th century, and will prompt very rapidly a flurry of similar attempts that will yield within a few decades an incredible number of molecules from an ever growing number of research groups throughout Europe, and soon in the trail, in the US. In the frame of that same investigation, Robiquet in addition evidences the presence of
uric acid within insects feeding on plant tissues. Over a period of some fifteen years, Pierre Robiquet will also conduct a series of investigations on
bitter almonds oil, a complex substance obtained from
Prunus dulcis. In 1816, together with
Jean-Jacques Colin, they obtain a new component which they call "éther hydrochlorique", (
1,2-dichloroethane), which they will try to promote as a reinvigorating medicine. In 1830, together with
Antoine Boutron-Charlard, Robiquet obtains a new molecule which he calls
amygdalin; this component presented strange properties and was the first
glycoside to be evidenced. This discovery was opening the door to the huge family of aromatic molecules, that are based on the cyclic 6 carbon benzenoic structure. In their various attempts at breaking down amygdalin in by-products, Robiquet and Boutron-Charlard obtained
benzaldehyde but they failed in working out a proper interpretation of the structure of amygdalin that would account for it, and thus missed the identification of the
benzoyl radical . This last step was achieved some few months later (1832) by
Friedrich Wöhler and
Justus Liebig, these two got all the credit for this breakthrough result that was opening an entirely new branch for the industry of chemicals with wide-ranging applications. Amygdalin and related molecules have been used throughout the 19th (promoted by
Ernst T. Krebs) and 20th centuries as anti-cancer drugs, however with inconclusive results as to actual benefits, while it was demonstrated in 1972 in a study at the
Sloan-Kettering Cancer Institute that
amygdalin (often sold under the brand name of "
Laetrile") could be toxic as it breaks down in the body to form cyanide. == Main published works ==