Reciprocal Net Site sponsor
   Site Info    |    Search
Strychnine - Reciprocal Net Common Molecule Log in
You will need to download and install a Java plug-in in order to view this applet. Download Sun's Java plug-in from here.
TIP > Click and drag your mouse inside the applet above to rotate the molecule in 3-D. Applet instructions...

Switch to another visualization applet:

> miniJaMM open in new window...
- JaMM1
- JaMM2

Strychnine

Strychnine is so poisonous that only 0.35 grams will kill an adult.

Chemical Formula: C21H22N2O2
Other names: Strychnidin-10-one
Layman's explanation: Plants from the genus Strychnos, located in Southeast Asia, were known to be highly toxic as early as the 1500s. The poison itself was isolated in 1818 by two French chemists Pelletier and Caventou. Strychnine was one of the first complex biological molecules to be synthesized artificially in a lab. R. B. Woodward completed this task in 1954. Doctors once prescribed small amounts of strychnine as a treatment for common illnesses, but today it is used primarily as a pesticide. Strychnine is the active ingredient in rat poison, and it is used to eliminate birds that attack crops. Strychnine acts as a very strong stimulant by blocking inhibitory receptors in nervous tissue, causing an increase in heart rate, seizures, and respiratory arrest. Strychnine poisoning can be treated by taking barbiturates until the liver has cleaned enough strychnine from the blood.
Keywords: pesticide, neurotoxin, plant

Reciprocal Net site software 0.9.1-50, copyright (c) 2002-2009, The Trustees of Indiana University
Files and data presented via this software are property of their respective owners.
Reciprocal Net is funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation as part of the National Science Digital Library project. NSDL