Common NameMethylamine
DescriptionMethylamine occurs endogenously from amine catabolism and its tissue levels increase in some pathological conditions, including diabetes. Interestingly, methylamine and ammonia levels are reciprocally controlled by a semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase activity that deaminates methylamine to formaldehyde with the production of ammonia and hydrogen peroxide. Methylamine also targets the voltage-operated neuronal potassium channels, probably inducing release of neurotransmitter(s). Semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase (SSAO) catalyzes the deamination of primary amines. Such deamination has been shown capable of regulating glucose transport in adipose cells. It has been independently discovered that the primary structure of vascular adhesion protein-1 (VAP-1) is identical to SSAO. Increased serum SSAO activities have been found in patients with diabetic mellitus, vascular disorders, and Alzheimer's disease. The SSAO-catalyzed deamination of endogenous substrates like methylamine led to production of toxic formaldehyde. Chronic elevated methylamine increases the excretion of malondialdehyde and microalbuminuria. Amine oxidase substrates such as methylamine have been shown to stimulate glucose uptake by increasing the recruitment of the glucose transporter GLUT4 from vesicles within the cell to the cell surface. Inhibition of this effect by the presence of semicarbazide and catalase led to the suggestion that the process is mediated by the hydrogen peroxide produced in the oxidation of these amines (PMID: 16049393 , 12686132 , 17406961 ). Methylamine has been identified as a uremic toxin according to the European Uremic Toxin Working Group (PMID: 22626821 ).
Structure
Molecular FormulaCH5N
Average Mass31.05710
Monoisotopic Mass31.04220
IUPAC Namemethanamine
Traditional NameMethylamine
CAS Registry Number74-89-5
SMILESC[NH3+]
InChI IdentifierInChI=1S/CH5N/c1-2/h2H2,1H3
InChI KeyBAVYZALUXZFZLV-UHFFFAOYSA-N
CHEBI IDCHEBI:59338
HMDB IDHMDB0000164
Pathways
NameSMPDB/PathBank
Tyrosine metabolism
Alkaptonuria
Hawkinsinuria
Tyrosinemia Type I
Citalopram Action Pathway
Disulfiram Action Pathway
Tyrosinemia, transient, of the newborn
Dopamine beta-hydroxylase deficiency
Monoamine oxidase-a deficiency (MAO-A)
Citalopram Metabolism Pathway
StateLiquid
Water Solubility3.67e+02 g/l
logP-1.06
logS1.07
pKa (Strongest Acidic)Not Available
pKa (Strongest Basic)10.08
Hydrogen Acceptor Count1
Hydrogen Donor Count1
Polar Surface Area26.02 Ų
Rotatable Bond Count0
Physiological Charge1
Formal Charge0
Refractivity9.92 m³·mol⁻¹
Polarizability3.86

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