Description
Cinromide is an anticonvulsant agent. Cinromide inhibits epithelial neutral amino acid transporter B0AT1 (SLC6A19) with an IC50 of 0.5 μM.
Product information
CAS Number: 58473-74-8
Molecular Weight: 254.12
Formula: C11H12BrNO
Chemical Name: (2E)-3-(3-bromophenyl)-N-ethylprop-2-enamide
Smiles: CCNC(=O)/C=C/C1C=C(Br)C=CC=1
InChiKey: LDCXGZCEMNMWIL-VOTSOKGWSA-N
InChi: InChI=1S/C11H12BrNO/c1-2-13-11(14)7-6-9-4-3-5-10(12)8-9/h3-8H,2H2,1H3,(H,13,14)/b7-6+
Technical Data
Appearance: Solid Power
Purity: ≥98% (or refer to the Certificate of Analysis)
Solubility: DMSO : ≥ 100 mg/mL (393.51 mM).
Shipping Condition: Shipped under ambient temperature as non-hazardous chemical or refer to Certificate of Analysis
Storage Condition: Dry, dark and -20 oC for 1 year or refer to the Certificate of Analysis.
Shelf Life: ≥12 months if stored properly.
Stock Solution Storage: 0 - 4 oC for 1 month or refer to the Certificate of Analysis.
Drug Formulation: To be determined
HS Tariff Code: 382200
How to use
In Vitro:
Cinromide (10-100 μM) inhibits 5-HT-induced contractions in rat fundus strips by 46%. Cinromide (100 μM) inhibits monoamine oxidase prepared from both liver and brain of rats.
In Vivo:
Cinromide shows electroshock convulsion and leptazol(pentetrazo1)-induced convulsion in mice, with ED50s of 60 ± 11 mg/kg, 90 ± 15 mg/kg and 80 ± 15 mg/kg, 300 ± 61 mg/kg for i.p. and oral administrion, respectively. Cinromide produces a dose-related antileptazol activity with an ED50 value of 58 ± 11 mg/kg by i.p. administration in rats. Furthermore, Cinromide (75 mg/kg) significantly elevates the amount of leptazol needed to induce clonic seizures in the intravenously infused leptazol-threshold test in rats. Cinromide (300 mg/kg, i.p) shows no sifnificant effect on the anaesthetized open-chested dogs after 4 h treatment, neither in conscious dogs after 5-h oral treatment with 300 and 600 mg/kg of Cinromide. Cinromide (40 mg/kg, i.v.) depresses the response of the neuron to the unconditioned maxillary nerve stimulus, increasing the latency and decreasing the number of spikes, and depresses the response of the neuron to the unconditioned maxillary nerve stimulus, increasing the latency and decreasing the number of spikes. Cinromide (20, 40, 80 mg/kg, i.v.) increases the latency of the unconditioned response and segmental inhibition dose-dependently. Cinromide decreases periventricular inhibition and EEG.
Products are for research use only. Not for human use.
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