Brucine, an
alkaloid closely related to
strychnine, is most commonly found in the "
Strychnos nux-vomica" tree. Brucine poisoning is rare, since it is usually ingested with strychnine, and strychnine is more toxic than brucine. In synthetic chemistry, it can be used as a tool for
stereospecific chemical syntheses.
History
Brucine was first discovered in 1819 by Pelletier and Caventou in the bark of the Strychnos nux vomica tree[1] While its structure was not deduced until much later, it was determined that it was closely related to strychnine in 1884, when the chemist Hanssen converted both strychnine and brucine into the same molecule[2].
Toxicity
The probable fatal dose of brucine in adults is 1 g[3]. In other animals, the LD50 varies considerably[4].
Glycine binds to receptors on inhibitory neurons to terminate action potentials. Its binding terminates an action potential by causing an influx of chloride ions into the neuron, repolarizing the neuron to its
resting potential. Brucine also binds to these receptors, but its binding does not trigger an influx of chloride ions. Brucine's toxicity arises because glycine is blocked from binding to its receptors, making inhibition of an action potential more difficult.
Identification and Treatment
Historically, brucine was distinguished from strychnine by the addition of chromic acid in H2SO4, since it does not give off the series of colors that is characteristic of strychnine[5].
Since brucine is a large chiral molecule, it has been used as an enantioselective recognition agent using in
chiral resolution. Fisher first reported its use as a resolving agent in 1899, and it was the first natural product used as an
organocatalyst in a reaction resulting in a successful enantiomeric enrichment by
Marckwald
, in 1904[7]. Its bromide salt has been used as the stationary phase in
HPLC in order to selectively bind one of two anionic enantiomers[8]. Brucine has also been used in
fractional distillation in acetone in order to resolve dihydroxy
fatty acids[9], as well as diarylcarbinols[10].
Brucine is also used in traditional Chinese medicine as an anti-inflammatory and
analgesic agent[13], as well as in some
Ayurveda and
homeopathy drugs[14].
“Well, suppose, then, that this poison was brucine, and you were to take a milligramme the first day, two milligrams the second day, and so on…at the end of a month, when drinking water from the same carafe, you would kill the person who drank with you, without your perceiving…that there was any poisonous substance mingled with this water.”[15]
Brucine in also mentioned in
The Mechanic (1972 film), in which the hitman Steve McKenna betrays his mentor, aging hitman Arthur Bishop, using a celebratory glass of wine spiked with brucine, leaving Bishop to die of an apparent heart attack[16].
References
^Wormley, T (1869). Micro-chemistry of poisons including their physiological, pathological, and legal relations : Adapted to the use of the medical jurist, physician, and general chemist. New York: W. Wood.
^Buckingham, J (2007). Bitter Nemesis: The Intimate History of Strychnine. CRC Press. p. 225.
^Gosselin, R. E.; Smith, R. P.; Hodge, H. C. (1984). Clinical Toxicology of Commercial Products (5 ed.). Baltimore/London: Williams & Wilkins.
^Goodman, L. (2006). Goodman & Gilman's the pharmacological basis of therapeutics (11 ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill.
^Glasby, J. (1975). Encyclopedia of the alkaloids. New York: Plenum Press. p. 214.
^Teske, J; Weller, J; Albrecht, U; Fieguth, A (2011). "Fatal Intoxication Due to Brucine". Journal of Analytical Toxicology. 35: 248–253.
^Koskinen, A (1993). Asymmetric synthesis of natural products. Chichester: J. Wiley. pp. 17, 28–29.
^Zarbua, K; Kral, V. "Quaternized brucine as a novel chiral selector". Tetrahedron: Asymmetry: 2567–2570.
^Malkar, N; Kumar, V (1998). "Optical resolution of (±)-Threo-9,10,16-trihydroxy hexadecanoic acid using (−)brucine". Journal of the American Oil Chemists' Society. 75 (10): 1461–1463.
^Toda, F; Tanaka, K; Koshiro, K (1991). "A New Preparative Method for Optically Active Diarylcarbinols". Tetrahedron: Asymmetry. 2: 873–874.
^Qin, J (2012). "Anti-Tumor Effects of Brucine Immune-Nanoparticles on Hepatocellular Carcinoma". International Journal of Nanomedicine. 7: 369–379.
^Zhang, J; Wang, S; Chen, X; Zhide, H; Xiao, M (2003). "Capillary Electrophorese with Field-Enhanced Stacking for Rapid and Sensitive Determination of Strychnine and Brucine". Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry. 376: 210–213.
^Rathi, A; Srivastava, N; Khatoon, S; Rawat, A (2008). "TLC Determination of Strychnine and Brucine of Strychnos nun vomica in Ayurveda and Homeopathy Drugs". Chromatographia: 607–613.
^Dumas, Alexandre (1845). The Count of Monte Cristo. Feedbooks. p. 622.