Securinine

Securinine is an alkaloid found in Securinega suffruticosa[1] and Phyllanthus niruri.[2]

Securinine
Identifiers
CAS Number
PubChem CID
ChemSpider
UNII
KEGG
ChEBI
ChEMBL
CompTox Dashboard (EPA)
ECHA InfoCard100.222.962
Chemical and physical data
FormulaC13H15NO2
Molar mass217.268 g·mol−1
3D model (JSmol)

Pharmacology

Securinine has been discontinued from pharmacological use in clinical practice for the treatment of polio and facial nerve palsy because of its adverse effects. Securinine is a GABA-A antagonist.[3]

Research

gollark: They would need cubical chunks or would waste lots of memory.
gollark: I have an R3 1200, which is at least good-for-the-time-I-got-it in multicore.
gollark: Probably partly I guess? Garbage collection is evil.
gollark: At 1080p, though.
gollark: My ultra-powerful GTX 1050 can of course manage an astonishing 50FPS on my used and at this point not even new to me monitor.

See also

References

  1. Wang D, Fang L, Du G (2018). "Securinine". Natural small molecule drugs from plants. Springer Singapore. pp. 325–330. doi:10.1007/978-981-10-8022-7_54. ISBN 978-981-10-8021-0.
  2. Patel JR, Tripathi P, Sharma V, Chauhan NS, Dixit VK (November 2011). "Phyllanthus amarus: ethnomedicinal uses, phytochemistry and pharmacology: a review". Journal of Ethnopharmacology. 138 (2): 286–313. doi:10.1016/j.jep.2011.09.040. PMID 21982793.
  3. "Securinine". PubChem, US National Library of Medicine. 2020-07-04.
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