Category
page 1Atranes
phenylsilatrane
Phenylsilatrane is a convulsant chemical which has been used as a rodenticide. Phenylsilatrane and some of its analogs with 4-substituents of H, CH3, Cl, Br, and CSi(CH3)3 are highly toxic to mice. They have been observed in the laboratory to inhibit the 35S-tert-butylbicyclophosphorothionate (TBPS) binding site (GABA-gated chloride channel) of mouse brain membranes.
atrane
thumb|right|The atrane structure
Atranes are a class of tricyclic molecules that are fused to a common central bond. Unlike the propellanes, the central bond is a transannular dative bond from a Lewis base—typically nitrogen—at one bridgehead to a Lewis acidic atom such as silicon or boron at the other bridgehead. Each of the three rings is therefore heterocyclic. Each of the rings is typically five atoms, or sometimes six atoms. The name "atrane" was first proposed by .