NCBI Taxonomy: 1789066

Senna marilandica (ncbi_taxid: 1789066)

found 8 associated metabolites at species taxonomy rank level.

Ancestor: Senna

Child Taxonomies: none taxonomy data.

N-Methylphenethylamine

InChI=1/C9H13N/c1-10-8-7-9-5-3-2-4-6-9/h2-6,10H,7-8H2,1H3

C9H13N (135.1047938)


N-Methylphenethylamine is a natural product found in Acacia kettlewelliae, Senegalia berlandieri, and other organisms with data available.

   

N-Methylphenethylamine

N-methylphenethylamine, conjugate acid

C9H13N (135.1047938)


N-methylphenethylamine, also known as N-methylphenethylamine hydrochloride or N-methylphenethylamine, conjugate acid, is a member of the class of compounds known as phenethylamines. Phenethylamines are compounds containing a phenethylamine moiety, which consists of a phenyl group substituted at the second position by an ethan-1-amine. N-methylphenethylamine is slightly soluble (in water) and a very strong basic compound (based on its pKa). N-methylphenethylamine can be found in a number of food items such as apple, white cabbage, carrot, and cabbage, which makes N-methylphenethylamine a potential biomarker for the consumption of these food products. N-Methylphenethylamine (NMPEA) is a naturally occurring trace amine neuromodulator in humans that is derived from the trace amine, phenethylamine (PEA). It has been detected in human urine (<1 Œºg over 24 hours) and is produced by phenylethanolamine N-methyltransferase with phenethylamine as a substrate. PEA and NMPEA are both alkaloids that are found in a number of different plant species as well. Some Acacia species, such as A. rigidula, contain remarkably high levels of NMPEA (~2300‚Äì5300 ppm). NMPEA is also present at low concentrations (< 10 ppm) in a wide range of foodstuffs . N-methylphenethylamine, also known as N-methylphenethylamine hydrochloride or N-methylphenethylamine, conjugate acid, is a member of the class of compounds known as phenethylamines. Phenethylamines are compounds containing a phenethylamine moiety, which consists of a phenyl group substituted at the second position by an ethan-1-amine. N-methylphenethylamine is slightly soluble (in water) and a very strong basic compound (based on its pKa). N-methylphenethylamine can be found in a number of food items such as apple, white cabbage, carrot, and cabbage, which makes N-methylphenethylamine a potential biomarker for the consumption of these food products. N-Methylphenethylamine (NMPEA) is a naturally occurring trace amine neuromodulator in humans that is derived from the trace amine, phenethylamine (PEA). It has been detected in human urine (<1 μg over 24 hours) and is produced by phenylethanolamine N-methyltransferase with phenethylamine as a substrate. PEA and NMPEA are both alkaloids that are found in a number of different plant species as well. Some Acacia species, such as A. rigidula, contain remarkably high levels of NMPEA (~2300–5300 ppm). NMPEA is also present at low concentrations (< 10 ppm) in a wide range of foodstuffs .

   

N-Methylphenethylamine

N-Methylphenethylamine

C9H13N (135.1047938)


   

N-Methylphenethylamine

N-Methyl-beta-phenylaethylamin [German]

C9H13N (135.1047938)


N-Methylbenzeneethanamine. CAS Common Chemistry. CAS, a division of the American Chemical Society, n.d. https://commonchemistry.cas.org/detail?cas_rn=589-08-2 (retrieved 2024-08-21) (CAS RN: 589-08-2). Licensed under the Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0).