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Deoxyepinephrine

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Not to be confused with desoxyephedrine, an alternative name formethamphetamine.
Deoxyepinephrine
Names
Preferred IUPAC name
4-[2-(Methylamino)ethyl]benzene-1,2-diol
Other names
Epinine;N-Methyldopamine; 3,4-Dihydroxy-N-methylphenethylamine
Identifiers
3D model (JSmol)
ChEMBL
ChemSpider
ECHA InfoCard100.007.200Edit this at Wikidata
KEGG
MeSHDeoxyepinephrine
UNII
  • InChI=1S/C9H13NO2/c1-10-5-4-7-2-3-8(11)9(12)6-7/h2-3,6,10-12H,4-5H2,1H3 checkY
    Key: NGKZFDYBISXGGS-UHFFFAOYSA-N checkY
  • InChI=1/C9H13NO2/c1-10-5-4-7-2-3-8(11)9(12)6-7/h2-3,6,10-12H,4-5H2,1H3
    Key: NGKZFDYBISXGGS-UHFFFAOYAT
  • Oc1ccc(cc1O)CCNC
Properties
C9H13NO2
Molar mass167.21 g/mol
Appearancecolorless crystalline solid
Melting point188 to 189 °C (370 to 372 °F; 461 to 462 K)[1]
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in theirstandard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
checkY verify (what is checkY☒N ?)
Chemical compound

Deoxyepinephrine, also known by the common namesN-methyldopamine andepinine, is anorganic compound andnatural product that is structurally related to the importantneurotransmittersdopamine andepinephrine. All three of these compounds also belong to thecatecholamine family. The pharmacology of epinine largely resembles that of its "parent", dopamine. Epinine has been found in plants, insects and animals. It is also of significance as the active metabolic breakdown product of theprodrugibopamine, which has been used to treatcongestive heart failure.[2][3]

Occurrence

[edit]

Epinine does not seem to occur widely, but it is present as a minor alkaloid in some plants, such as thepeyote cactus,Lophophora williamsii,[4] and a species ofAcacia,[5] as well as inScotch Broom,Cytisus scoparius.[6] This compound has also been isolated from theadrenal medulla of pigs and cows,[7] and from thetoad,Rhinella marina.[8] It has also been detected in thelocust,Locusta migratoria.[9]

Chemistry

[edit]

Preparation

[edit]

The first total synthesis of epinine was reported by Buck, who prepared it from3,4-dimethoxyphenethylamine ("homoveratrylamine") by first converting the latter to itsSchiff base withbenzaldehyde, thenN-methylating this withmethyl iodide; hydrolysis of the resulting product was followed by cleavage of the methyl ethers usinghydriodic acid to furnish epinine.[10] A very similar synthesis, differing only in the use ofdimethyl sulfate for theN-methylation, and HBr for theO-demethylation, but providing more extensive experimental details, was published by Borgman in 1973.[11]

An earliersemi-synthesis (so-called because it began with the natural productlaudanosine) due to Pyman[1] is incorrectly cited by Buck,[10] and the error carried over to the entry for epinine (under the name deoxyepinephrine) in the Merck Index.[12]

Common salts of epinine are: hydrochloride, C9H13NO2.HCl, m.p. 179-180 °C; sulfate, (C9H13NO2)2.H2SO4, m.p. 289-290 °C;[1] hydrobromide, C9H13NO2.HBr, m.p. 165-166 °C.[11]

Structure

[edit]

The X-ray structure of epinine hydrobromide has been reported.[13]

Pharmacology

[edit]

One of the most prominent pharmacological characteristics of epinine, its ability to raise blood pressure, was noted as early as 1910, by Barger and Dale, who reported that "methylamino-ethyl-catechol", as they called it, had about 1/7 x thepressor potency of epinephrine, but about 5 x the potency of dopamine ("amino-ethyl-catechol") in cat preparations.[14] The Buroughs Wellcome Co., for which Barger, Dale and Pyman (see "Chemistry" section) worked, subsequently marketed the hydrochloride salt of "methylamino-ethyl-catechol", under the name "epinine", as a substitute for epinephrine.[15] Tainter further quantified the pressor activity of epinine inatropine-treated and anesthetized intact cats, showing that doses of 0.02-0.2 mg, given i.v., were about 1/12 as active as l-epinephrine, but that the effect lasted about twice as long (~ 3 minutes), and was accompanied by an increase in pulse rate.[15]

Eventually, epinine was determined to be a non-selective stimulant of dopamine (DA) receptors, α-, and β-adrenoceptors, with the stimulation of D2 receptors leading to inhibition ofnoradrenergic andganglionic neurotransmission. These studies, conducted using anesthetized animals, were amplified by van Woerkens and co-workers, who compared the effects of epinine and dopamine in unanesthetized pigs, so as to avoid any possible influences of an anesthetic. Drug doses were in the range of 1-10 μg/kg/min, administered by i.v. infusion over a period of 10 minutes. The results of these experiments showed that, in pigs, over the dose-range employed, epinine was more potent than dopamine as an agonist on D2, α-, and β2-receptors, but was weaker than dopamine as a D1-agonist. The β1-agonist effect of both compounds was weak or non-existent.[16]

Comparable studies, in which blood pressure, heart rate and serumprolactin levels were measured after the administration of 0.5-4 μg/kg/min of epinine by i.v. infusion over a 15-minute period to healthy humans, were reported subsequently by Daul and co-workers.[17] These investigators found that at lower doses (0.5 or 1.0 μg/kg/min), which produced plasma concentrations of 20-80 nM/L, epinine, in common with dopamine, caused a fall in prolactin level, but did not affect blood pressure or heart rate. At higher doses (2.0 or 4.0 μg/kg/min), epinine significantly increased both systolic and diastolic blood pressure, as well as heart rate. In contrast, dopamine caused an increase in systolic blood pressure and heart rate only.Both drugs increaseddiuresis andnatriuresis - effects that are thought to be due to the activation of renal D1 receptors.It was concluded that at the lower doses, epinine and dopamine exerted their effects only at DA (D2) receptors, but did not activate α- or β-adrenoceptors. At the higher doses, epinine activated α-, β1- and β2-receptors to about the same extent, whereas dopamine showed only a mild stimulation of β1-receptors, without any effects on α- or β2-receptors. Additionally, it was observed that the effects of epinine were largely due to its direct action on receptors, while dopamine also produced some of its effects indirectly, by stimulatingnorepinephrine release.

Toxicity

[edit]

LD50 for HCl salt: 212 mg/kg (mouse; i.p.). For comparison, it might be noted thatdopamine has a LD50 of 1978 mg/kg under the same conditions.[18]

See also

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References

[edit]
  1. ^abcF. L. Pyman (1910). "XXVIII. Isoquinoline derivatives. Part III. o-Dihydroxy-bases. The conversion of 1-keto-6,7-dimethoxy-2-methyltetrahydroisoquinolines into 3:4-dihydroxyphenylethylalkylamines."J. Chem. Soc., Trans.97 264-280.
  2. ^P. A. Zwieten (1994). "Pharmacotherapy of congestive heart failure."Pharmacy World & Science16 334 - 342.
  3. ^R. Gifford, W. C. Randolph, F. C. Heineman and J. A. Ziemniak (1986). "Analysis of epinine and its metabolites in man after oral administration of its pro-drug ibopamine using high-performance liquid chromatography with electrochemical detection."Journal of Chromatography B381 83-93. doi 10.1016/S0378-4347(00)83567-7
  4. ^J. Lundstrom (1971). "Biosynthesis of mescaline and tetrahydroisoquinoline alkaloids inLophophora williamsii (Lem.) Coult. Occurrence and biosynthesis of catecholamine and other intermediates."Acta Chem. Scand.25 3489-3499.http://actachemscand.dk/pdf/acta_vol_25_p3489-3499.pdf
  5. ^B. A. Clement, C. M. Goff and T. D. A. Forbes (1998). "Toxic amines and alkaloids fromAcacia rigidula."Phytochemistry49 1377-1380.
  6. ^T. A. Smith (1977). "Phenethylamine and related compounds in plants."Phytochemistry16 9-18.
  7. ^P. Laduron, P. van Gompel, J. Leysen and M. Claeys (1974). "In vivo formation of epinine in adrenal medulla. A possible step for adrenaline biosynthesis."Naunyn-Schmiedebergs Arch. Pharmacol.286 227-238.
  8. ^F. Märki, J. Axelrod and B. Witkop (1962). "Catecholamines and N-methyltransferase in the South American toad (Bufo marinus)."Biochim. Biophys. Acta58 367-369.
  9. ^S. Tanaka and N. Takeda (1997). "Biogenic monoamines in the brain and the corpus cardiacum between albino and normal strains of the migratory locust,Locusta migratoria."Comp. Biochem. Physiol. Pt. C: Comp. Pharmacol. Toxicol.117 221-227.
  10. ^abJ. S. Buck (1930). "Synthesis of lodal and epinine."J. Am. Chem. Soc.52 4119-4122.
  11. ^abR. Borgman et al. (1973). "Synthesis and pharmacology of centrally acting dopamine derivatives and analogs in relation to Parkinson's Disease."J. Med. Chem.16 630-633.
  12. ^The Merck Index, 15th Ed. (2013), p. 524 Monograph2904, O'Neil: The Royal Society of Chemistry. Available online at:http://www.rsc.org/Merck-Index/monograph/mono1500002904
  13. ^J. Giesecke (1976). "The structure of the catecholamines. V. The crystal and molecular structure of epinine hydrobromide."Acta Crystallographica Section B32 2337-2340.
  14. ^G. Barger and H. H. Dale (1910)."Chemical structure and sympathomimetic action of amines."J. Physiol.41 19-59.
  15. ^abM. L. Tainter (1930). "Comparative actions of sympathomimetic compounds: catechol derivatives."J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther.40 43-64.
  16. ^L. J. van Woerkens, F. Boomsma, A. J. Man in 't Veld, M. M. Bevers, P. D. Verdouw (1992). "Differential cardiovascular and neuroendocrine effects of epinine and dopamine in conscious pigs before and after adrenoceptor blockade."Br. J. Pharmacol.107 303–310.
  17. ^A. Daul et al. (1995). "Dose-dependent separation of dopaminergic and adrenergic effects of epinine in healthy volunteers."Naunyn-Schmiedebergs Arch. Pharmacol.352 429-437
  18. ^J. Z. Ginos et al. (1975). "Cholinergic effects of molecular segments of apomorphine and dopaminergic effects of N,N-dialkylated dopamines."18 1194-1200.
α1
Agonists
Antagonists
α2
Agonists
Antagonists
β
Agonists
Antagonists
D1-like
Agonists
PAMs
Antagonists
D2-like
Agonists
Antagonists
Phenethylamines
Amphetamines
Phentermines
Cathinones
Phenylisobutylamines
(and further-extended)
Catecholamines
(and close relatives)
Cyclized
phenethylamines
Phenylalkylpyrrolidines
2-Benzylpiperidines
(phenidates)
Phenylmorpholines
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Phenyloxazolamines
(aminorexes)
Isoquinolines and
tetrahydroisoquinolines
2-Aminoindanes
2-Aminotetralins
Others / unsorted
Related compounds
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