α-aminobutyric acid

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Structural formula
Structural formula of α-aminobutyric acid
Structural formula of α-aminobutyric acid without specifying the stereochemistry
General
Surname α-aminobutyric acid
other names
  • 2-aminobutyric acid
  • Butyrin
  • Aba
  • AABA
  • Homoalanine
Molecular formula C 4 H 9 NO 2
External identifiers / databases
CAS number 2835-81-6
EC number 220-616-5
ECHA InfoCard 100,018,742
PubChem 6657
ChemSpider 6405
DrugBank DB04454
Wikidata Q285687
properties
Molar mass 103.12 g mol −1
Physical state

firmly

Melting point

292–303 ° C (decomposition)

safety instructions
GHS labeling of hazardous substances
07 - Warning

Caution

H and P phrases H: 317
P: 280
As far as possible and customary, SI units are used. Unless otherwise noted, the data given apply to standard conditions .

α-aminobutyric acid (also called Aba or AABA for short) is a non-proteinogenic α- amino acid and one of the aminobutyric acids . Structurally, it is derived from butyric acid by substituting the α- hydrogen atom with an amino group (-NH 2 ) . A rather rarely used common name is butyrin .

Isomers

Stereoisomers of α-aminobutyric acid
Surname L- α-aminobutyric acid D -α-aminobutyric acid
other names (+) - α-aminobutyric acid
( S ) -α-aminobutyric acid
(-) - α-Aminobutyric acid
( R ) -α-aminobutyric acid
Structural formula L-Butyrine.svg D-Butyrine.svg
CAS number 1492-24-6 2623-91-8
2835-81-6 (racemate)
EC number 216-083-3 220-084-4
220-616-5 (racemate)
ECHA info card 100.014.622 100.018.260
100.018.742 (racemate)
PubChem 80283 -
6657 (racemate)
DrugBank DB04454 (racemate)
Wikidata Q27104317 Q76967546
Q285687 (racemate)

A well-known structural isomer is γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA), an inhibitory neurotransmitter .

Extraction

α-aminobutyric acid is u. a. obtained from threonine by hydrolysis with hydrochloric acid. It is also obtained from 2-bromobutanoic acid by reaction with aqueous NH 3 .

meaning

During alcoholic fermentation , α-aminobutyric acid is broken down by microorganisms such as yeast to form 1-propanol , a fusel alcohol .

Occurrence

β-Aminobutyric acid (BABA) is a naturally occurring non-proteinogenic amino acid . In plants it acts against various pathogens.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. CRC Handbook of Tables for Organic Compound Identification , Third Edition, 1984, ISBN 0-8493-0303-6 .
  2. a b L-2-Aminobutyric acid data sheet from Sigma-Aldrich , accessed on December 1, 2019 ( PDF ).
  3. Kurt Heyns, Wolfgang Walter: The formation of α-aminobutyric acid from threonine during hydrolysis with hydrochloric acid . In: Die Naturwissenschaften , 1952 , 39 (22) , p. 507.
  4. Werner Baltes and Reinhard Matissek: Food chemistry . Jumper; 7., completely revised. 2011 edition; ISBN 978-3-64216538-2 ; P. 473.
  5. Ton, J. and Mauch-Mani, B. (2004): Beta-amino-butyric acid-induced resistance against necrotrophic pathogens is based on ABA-dependent priming for callose. In: Plant J. 38 (1); 119-130; PMID 15053765