Putrescine

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Putrescine

Putrescine

Chemical name 1,4-Diaminobutane
Other names Tetramethylenediamine
Butane-1,4-diamine
Chemical formula C4H12N2
Molecular mass 88.15 g·mol−1
CAS number [110-60-1]
Density 0.877 g·cm−3
Melting point 27 °C
Boiling point 158-160 °C
SMILES C(N)CCCN
Disclaimer and references

Putrescine (sometimes spelled putrescin or putrescene) is an organic chemical compound NH2(CH2)4NH2 (1,4-diaminobutane or butanediamine) formed by and having the smell of rotting flesh.

It is related to cadaverine; both are produced by the breakdown of amino acids in living and dead organisms. Putrescine and cadaverine were first described by the Berlin physician Ludwig Brieger in 1885.

Putrescine is synthesized in small quantities by healthy living cells by the action of ornithine decarboxylase. The polyamines, of which putrescine is one of the simplest, appear to be growth factors necessary for cell division.

Other foul-smelling chemical compounds include methanethiol and butyric acid.

Putrescine is featured as a non-lethal weapon in the science fiction novel Zodiac, by Neal Stephenson.

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