Harmine is the most active, relevent MAOI in tobacco(~1nM/k binding). The nomenclature on the harmala alkaloids is very inconsistent so I mean the
fully aromatic, tricyclic, one methyl group, with no methoxy group.
My plan is to soak some ground tobacco in 50% isopropanol and see if it extracts something the lights up under UV. I'm really unsure about how to
purify it.
Also I'm am unsure if it actually is in tobacco. I've seen articles identify it as the main MAOI in smokers, but not in smokeless tobacco users.
This makes me think norharmaline( loses the methoxy and becomes more aromatic) is reacting during combustion to produce it.
I would really appreciate anyone's 2 or even lesser number of cents.
EDIT: All i've seen on the forum is 1 post about analysis of the MAOI extractions on DIY TLC plates.
[Edited on 22-9-2013 by ni3rtap]unionised - 22-9-2013 at 01:24
If you extract a carrot with 50% IPA I suspect that you will get something that glows under UV light, but it won't be harmine.sonogashira - 22-9-2013 at 03:26
What evidence do you have that tobacco contains harmine? I had a quick look and could only find evidence of harman and nor-harman being detected in
cigarette smoke, but not harmine. I didn't look very thoroughly though. It seems a poor choice of material to extract harmine from, especially when
harmine rich plant sources are well known and availible.Mesa - 23-9-2013 at 04:45
I've read reports on beta carbolines being responsible for the addictive quality of tobacco that were referred to as "harmala type MAOI's." I'd kinda
assumed it was referring to harmaline/harmine. songashira's post prompted me to do further searching and I too cannot find any evidence pointing to
harmine being present in tobacco, but plenty of harman/norharman. bfesser - 23-9-2013 at 05:31
[Edited on 27-9-2013 by sonogashira]hive3 - 27-9-2013 at 05:45
In comparison to a messy Syrian rue extraction anything is preferable. The harmalas fluoresce under black light and after my last extraction my
kitchen had glowing splatter patterns on every wall and the ceiling.
My only point was that at a concentration of .0016g harman per gram of syrian rue, compared to .0000002g per gram tobacco (If the tobacco had the same
concentration as the smoke), the extraction would require about 10,000g of tobacco to get the same amount of product as 1g Syrian rue. Rich_Insane - 27-9-2013 at 18:17
If I recall correctly, the Pictet-Spengler (probably misspelled) cyclization reaction is quite straightforward and is an easy way to prepare
beta-carbolines from tryptamine or tryptophan.