Mass spectrometry of 2-substituted-4-arylthiazoles. 3—identification of microsomal nitroreduction products by mass spectrometry
✍ Scribed by Michael B. Mattammal; Terry V. Zenser; Bernard B. Davis; Wdward V. White
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1984
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 487 KB
- Volume
- 11
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1076-5174
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
The electron impact mass spectra of the chemical carcinogens 4-(4-nitrophenyl)-2-methylaminothiazole, 4-(4aminophenyl)-2-methylaminothiazole and 4-(4-aminophenyl)-2-aminothiazole were studied. The 4-(4-aminophenyl)-2-substituted thiazoles were isolated from the anaerobic microsomal reduction of their respective 4-nitrophenyl analogues. Microsomes prepared from rat and rabbit kidney tissues were used. The identity of the reduction products were established by chemical synthesis and mass spectrometry. The mass spectrometric fragmentation of the nitro derivative shows prominent ions arising from the loss of the nitro group, ring enlargement of the thiazoles, and the phenylthiirene ion resulting from 1,2-cleavage of the thiazole ring. In the 4-(4-aminophenyl)-2-substituted amino derivative prominent ions result from the preferential 1,2-cleavage of the thiazole ring to give the common 2-(4-aminophenyl)thiirene ion and subsequent fragmentation of this ion.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
Synthetic proteins with unusual architecture are obtained through chemoselective ligation, a method based on the condensation of unprotected peptides under mild aqueous conditions. The last step of a new procedure leading to a tri-branched conjugate consists of the chemoselective ligation reaction b
## Abstract The oxidation of the peptide leucine‐enkephalin (YGGFL) induced by the hydroxyl radical (HO^•^), formed under Fenton‐like conditions [Cu (II)/H~2~O~2~], was studied and monitored by LC‐MS. The oxidation products identified included products resultant from (a) the insertion of oxygen ato
The Fenton reaction for the degradation of surfactants has been investigated and partial degradation products have been identified and characterized by mass spectrometry for the case of fatty alcohol polyethoxy sulphates. The polar water-soluble products were investigated by liquid chromatography/ma
The Fenton reaction for the degradation of surfactants has been investigated and partial degradation products have been identified and characterized by mass spectrometry for the case of lauryl sulphate. The polar soluble products were investigated by liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (LC/MS) w