Benzamidine is an organic compound with the formula C6H5C(NH)NH2. It is the simplest aryl amidine. The compound is a white solid that is slightly soluble in water. It is usually handled as the hydrochloride salt, a white, water-soluble solid.

Structure

Benzamidine has one short C=NH bond and one longer C-NH2 bond, which are respectively 129 and 135 pm in length, respectively.

The triangular diamine group gives it a distinctive shape which shows up in difference density maps.

Applications

Benzamidine is a reversible competitive inhibitor of trypsin, trypsin-like enzymes, and serine proteases.

It is often used as a ligand in protein crystallography to prevent proteases from degrading a protein of interest. The benzamidine moiety is also found in some pharmaceuticals, such as dabigatran.

Condensation with various haloketones provides a synthetic route to 2,4-disubstituted imidazoles.

References


Benzamidine derivatives studied. Download Scientific Diagram

Benzamidine Hydrochloride Monohydrate GenDEPOT

B1200025.0 Benzamidine Hydrochloride, 25 Grams

Structure of benzamidine, benzamidinium, and pentamidine, and diagram

Duden Benzidin Rechtschreibung, Bedeutung, Definition, Herkunft