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Penicillamine disulfide, also known as D-penicillamine disulfide or cystamine, is a chemical compound derived from the dimerization of two molecules of D-penicillamine. It is a white crystalline solid with the chemical formula C10H20N2O4S2. Penicillamine disulfide is used in various applications, including as a chelating agent for heavy metal ions, a reducing agent in chemical reactions, and a component in the synthesis of pharmaceuticals and other organic compounds. It is also known for its potential therapeutic applications, such as in the treatment of certain metal poisoning and as a precursor in the production of drugs like penicillamine, which is used to treat conditions like Wilson's disease and rheumatoid arthritis.

312-10-7

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312-10-7 Usage

Check Digit Verification of cas no

The CAS Registry Mumber 312-10-7 includes 6 digits separated into 3 groups by hyphens. The first part of the number,starting from the left, has 3 digits, 3,1 and 2 respectively; the second part has 2 digits, 1 and 0 respectively.
Calculate Digit Verification of CAS Registry Number 312-10:
(5*3)+(4*1)+(3*2)+(2*1)+(1*0)=27
27 % 10 = 7
So 312-10-7 is a valid CAS Registry Number.

312-10-7SDS

SAFETY DATA SHEETS

According to Globally Harmonized System of Classification and Labelling of Chemicals (GHS) - Sixth revised edition

Version: 1.0

Creation Date: Aug 14, 2017

Revision Date: Aug 14, 2017

1.Identification

1.1 GHS Product identifier

Product name DL-penicillamine disulfide

1.2 Other means of identification

Product number -
Other names α,α'-diamino-β,β'-disulfanediyl-di-isovaleric acid

1.3 Recommended use of the chemical and restrictions on use

Identified uses For industry use only.
Uses advised against no data available

1.4 Supplier's details

1.5 Emergency phone number

Emergency phone number -
Service hours Monday to Friday, 9am-5pm (Standard time zone: UTC/GMT +8 hours).

More Details:312-10-7 SDS

312-10-7Relevant academic research and scientific papers

Kinetics and mechanism for reduction of the anticancer prodrug trans,trans,trans-[PtCl2(OH)2(c-C6H11NH2)(NH3)] (JM335) by thiols.

Lemma,Shi,Elding

, p. 1728 - 1734 (2008/10/08)

The reduction of the platinum(IV) prodrug trans,trans,trans-[PtCl2(OH)2(c-C6H11NH2)(NH3)] (JM335) by L-cysteine, DL-penicillamine, DL-homocysteine, N-acetyl-L-cysteine, 2-mercaptopropanoic acid, 2-mercaptosuccinic acid, and glutathione has been investigated at 25 degrees C in a 1.0 M aqueous perchlorate medium with 6.8 a reductive elimination process through an attack by sulfur at one of the mutually trans chloride ligands, yielding trans-[Pt(OH)2(c-C6H11NH2)(NH3)] and RSSR as the reaction products, as confirmed by 1H NMR. Second-order rate constants for the reduction of JM335 by the various protolytic species of the thiols span more than 3 orders of magnitude. Reduction with RS- is approximately 30-2000 times faster than with RSH. The linear correlation log(kRS) = (0.52 +/- 0.06)-pKRSH--(2.8 +/- 0.5) is observed, where kRS denotes the second-order rate constant for reduction of JM335 by a particular thiolate RS- and KRSH is the acid dissociation constant for the corresponding thiol RSH. The slope of the linear correlation indicates that the reactivity of the various thiolate species is governed by their proton basicity, and no significant steric effects are observed. The half-life for reduction of JM335 by 6 mM glutathione (40-fold excess) at physiologically relevant conditions of 37 degrees C and pH 7.30 is 23 s. This implies that JM335, in clinical use, is likely to undergo in vivo reduction by intracellular reducing agents such as glutathione prior to binding to DNA. Reduction results in the immediate formation of a highly reactive platinum(II) species, i.e., the bishydroxo complex in rapid protolytic equilibrium with its aqua form.

Reaction of ascorbic acid with S-nitrosothiols: Clear evidence for two distinct reaction pathways

Holmes, Anthony J.,Williams, D. Lyn H.

, p. 1639 - 1644 (2007/10/03)

Ascorbate reacts with S-nitrosothiols generally, in the pH range 3-13 by way of two distinct pathways, (a) at low [ascorbate], typically below ~1 × 10-4 mol dm-3 which leads to the formation of NO and the disulfide, and (b) at higher [ascorbate] when the products are the thiol and NO. Reaction (a) is Cu2+-dependent, and is completely cut out in the presence of EDTA, whereas reaction (b) is totally independent of [Cu2+] and takes place readily whether EDTA is present or not. For S-nitrosoglutathione (GSNO) the two reactions can be made quite separate, although for some reactants the two reactions overlap. In reaction (a), ascorbate acts as a reducing agent, generating Cu+ from Cu2+, which in turn reacts with RSNO forming initially NO, Cu2+ and RS-. The latter can then play the role of reducing agent for Cu2+, leading to disulfide formation. Ascorbate will initiate reaction when the free thiolate has initially been reduced to a very low level by the synthesis of RSNO from a large excess of nitrous acid over the thiol. Reaction (b) is interpreted in terms of nucleophilic attack by ascorbate at the nitroso-nitrogen atom, leading to thiol and O-nitrosoascorbate which breaks up, by a free-radical pathway, to give dehydroascorbic acid and NO. A similar pathway is the accepted mechanism in the literature for the nitrosation of ascorbate by nitrous acid and alkyl nitrites. The rate constant for the Cu2+-independent pathway increases sharply with pH and analysis of the variation of the rate constant with pH identifies a reaction pathway via both the mono- and di-anion forms of ascorbate, with the latter being the more reactive. As expected the entropy of activation is large and negative. Some aspects of structure-reactivity trends are discussed.

REACTION OF ARSENIC(III) OXIDE, ARSENOUS AND ARSENIC ACIDS WITH THIOLS

Serves, Spyros V.,Charalambidis, Yiannis C.,Sotiropoulos, Demetrios N.,Ioannou, Panayiotis V.

, p. 109 - 116 (2007/10/03)

Arsenic(III) oxide and arsenous acid in water or aqueous ethanolic solutions react, at room temperature, with a variety of lipophilic and hydrophilic thiols giving quantitatively triaryl and trialkyl trithioarsenites, (ArS)3As and (RS)3As.Aqueous solution

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