6-Monoacetylmorphine
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Systematic (IUPAC) name | |
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3-hydroxy-6-acetyl-(5α,6α)-7,8-Didehydro-4,5-epoxy-17-methylmorphinan
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Clinical data | |
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Routes of administration |
Intravenous |
Pharmacokinetic data | |
Biological half-life | < 5 mins |
Identifiers | |
CAS Number | 2784-73-8 ![]() |
ATC code | none |
PubChem | CID: 5462507 |
ChemSpider | 4575434 ![]() |
ChEMBL | CHEMBL592009 ![]() |
Synonyms | 6-acetylmorphine |
Chemical data | |
Formula | C19H21NO4 |
Molecular mass | 327.374 g/mol |
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6-Monoacetylmorphine (6-MAM) or 6-acetylmorphine (6-AM) is one of three active metabolites of heroin (diacetylmorphine), the others being morphine and the much less active 3-monoacetylmorphine (3-MAM).
6-MAM is rapidly created from heroin in the body, and then is either metabolized into morphine or excreted in the urine. Since 6-MAM is a unique metabolite to heroin, its presence in the urine confirms that heroin was the opioid used. This is significant because on a urine immunoassay drug screen, the test typically tests for morphine, which is a metabolite of a number of legal and illegal opiates/opioids such as codeine, morphine sulfate, and heroin. Trace amounts of 6-MAM, a specific metabolite of heroin, are also excreted for approximately 6-8 hours following heroin use.[1] so a urine specimen must be collected soon after the last heroin use, however, the presence of 6-MAM suggests that heroin was used as recently as within the last day. 6-MAM is naturally found in the brain of certain mammals.[2]
Heroin is rapidly metabolized by esterase enzymes in the brain and has an extremely short half-life. It has also relatively weak affinity to μ-opioid receptors because the 3-hydroxy group which is essential for effective binding to the receptor is masked by the acetyl group. Therefore, heroin acts as a pro-drug, serving as a lipophilic transporter of sorts for the systemic delivery of morphine, which actively binds with μ-opioid receptors.[3][4]
6-MAM already has a free 3-hydroxy group and shares the high lipophilicity of heroin, so it penetrates the brain just as quickly and does not need to be deacetylated at the 6-position in order to be bioactivated; this makes 6-monoacetylmorphine somewhat more potent than heroin,[5] but it is rarely encountered as an illicit drug due to the difficulty in selectively acetylating morphine at the 6-position without also acetylating the 3-position. This can however be accomplished by using acetic acid with an appropriate catalyst to carry out the acetylation,{[1]} rather than acetic anhydride, as acetic acid is not a strong enough acetylating agent to acetylate the phenolic 3-hydroxy group but is able to acetylate the 6-hydroxy group, thus selectively producing 6-MAM rather than heroin. The process used in creating black tar heroin actually leaves 6-MAM in the final product, which is one of several reasons why black tar, even when less pure, may be more potent than some powder varieties of heroin.
See also
- M3G, morphine-3-glucuronide an inactive metabolite of morphine much as 3-MAM is the less active metabolite of heroin (notably here as morphine is an active secondary metabolite of heroin itself with 6-Monoacetylmorphine being the intermediate stage)
- M6G, morphine-6-glucuronide the active variant in close relation to 6-MAM, being relative as twin metabolites of this articles very metabolite itself, morphine, twinned to a metabolite (3-MAM) of a parent compound (heroin) of this article's chemical
References
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- ↑ https://www.redwoodtoxicology.com/resources/drug_info/opiates
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- ↑ Ricerca Italiana - PRIN - Role of morphine glucuronides in heroin addiction
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- Heroin
- Morphine
- Morphinans
- Prodrugs
- Phenols
- Acetate esters
- Mu-opioid agonists
- Semisynthetic opioids
- Opioid metabolites