Decarboxylation is any chemical reaction in which a carboxyl group (-COOH) is split off from a compound as carbon dioxide (CO2).
In biochemistry
Common
biosynthetic decarboxylations of
amino acids to
amines are:
tryptophan to
tryptamine,
phenylalanine to
phenylethylamine,
tyrosine to
tyramine,
histidine to
histamine,
serine to
ethanolamine,
glutamic acid to
GABA,
lysine to
cadaverine,
arginine to
agmatine,
ornithine to
putrescine,
5-HTP to
serotonin, and
L-DOPA to
dopamine. Other decarboxylation reactions from the
citric acid cycle include:
pyruvate to
acetyl-CoA,
oxalosuccinate to α-
ketoglutarate, and α-
ketoglutarate to
succinyl-CoA. Enzymes that catalyze decarboxylations are called
decarboxylases or, more formally, carboxy-lyases (E.C.4.1.1).
In organic chemistry
Chemical decarboxylations
reactions often require extensive heating in high-boiling solvents.
Copper salts are often added as
catalysts. Also the addition of catalytic amounts of cyclohexen-2-one has been reported to catalyze the decarboxylation of
amino acids. Decarboxylations are especially easy for alpha-
keto acids due to the formation of a cyclic
transition state for instance in
Knoevenagel condensations. The
Barton decarboxylation is a radical reaction.
organic reactions
Decarboxylierung | Αποκαρβοξυλίωση | Décarboxylation | Decarboxylering