| Isoprene | |
|---|---|
| Chemical name | 2-methylbuta-1,3-diene |
| Chemical formula | C5H8 |
| Molecular mass | 68.11 g/mol |
| Density | 0.681 g/ml |
| Melting point | -145.95 °C |
| Boiling point | 34.067 °C |
| CAS number | 78-79-5 |
| SMILES | CC(=C)C=C |
Isoprene is a common synonym for the chemical compound 2-methylbuta-1,3-diene. It is commonly used in industry, is an important biological material, and can be a harmful environmental pollutant and toxicant when present in excess quantities.
At room temperature, isoprene is a colorless liquid which is highly flammable and easily ignited. It can form explosive mixtures in air and is highly reactive, capable of polymerizing explosively when heated. The United States Department of Transportation considers isoprene a hazardous material and requires special marking, labeling, and transportation for it.
It is most readily available industrially as a by-product of the thermal cracking of naphtha or oil. About 95% of isoprene production is used to produce cis-1,4-polyisoprene - a synthetic version of natural rubber.
Natural rubber is a polymer of isoprene - most often cis-1,4-polyisoprene - with a molecular weight of 100,000 to 1,000,000. Typically, a few percent of other materials, such as proteins, fatty acids, resins and inorganic materials are found in high quality natural rubber.
Some natural rubber sources are composed of trans-1,4-polyisoprene, a structural isomer which has similar, but not identical properties.
With a global biogenic production in the range of 350–500 Tg of carbon/year, isoprene has a large impact on atmospheric processes and is thus an important compound in the field of Atmospheric Chemistry. Isoprene affects the oxidative state of large air masses, is an important precursor for ozone, a pollutant in the lower atmosphere. Furthermore, isoprene forms secondary organic aerosols through photooxidation with OH radicals which also have wide-ranging health effects, particularly for the respiratory tract, and reduce visibility due to light scattering effects. Because of its atmospheric importance, much work has been devoted to emission studies from isoprene-emitting vegetation, and, kinetic and mechanistic studies of isoprene oxidation via OH radicals, ozone, and NO3 radicals.
It is a common structural motif in biological systems. The terpenes (for example, the carotenes are tetraterpenes) are derived from isoprene, as are the terpenoids and coenzyme Q. Also derived from isoprene are phytol, retinol (vitamin A), tocopherol (vitamin E), dolichols, and squalene. Heme A has an isoprenoid tail, and lanosterol, the sterol precursor in animals, is derived from squalene and hence from isoprene. The functional isoprene units in biological systems are dimethylallyl pyrophosphate (DMAPP) and its isomer isopentenyl pyrophosphate (IPP), which are used in the biosynthesis of terpenes and lanosterol derivatives.
In virtually all organisms, isoprene derivatives are synthetised by the HMG-CoA reductase pathway. Addition of these chains to proteins is termed isoprenylation.
According to the United States Department of Health and Human Services Eleventh Edition Report on Carcinogens, isoprene is reasonably expected to be a human carcinogen. Tumors have been observed in multiple locations in multiple test species exposed to isoprene vapor. No adequate human studies of the relationship between isoprene exposure and human cancer have been reported.
Statins are used to lower cholesterol, which is synthesized from the 15-carbon isoprenoid, farnesyl pyrophosphate, but also inhibit all other isoprenes, including coenzyme Q10. This flow chartshows the biosynthesis of isoprenes, and the point at which statins act to inhibit this process.
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Isopren | Isopren | Isoprène | Isopreen | イソプレン | Izopren | Isopreno | Изопрен
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