Page last updated: 2024-12-05

ethylbenzene

Description Research Excerpts Clinical Trials Roles Classes Pathways Study Profile Bioassays Related Drugs Related Conditions Protein Interactions Research Growth Market Indicators

Ethylbenzene is a colorless, flammable liquid with a sweet, aromatic odor. It is a petrochemical produced from the alkylation of benzene with ethylene. Ethylbenzene is a significant industrial chemical that is mainly used in the production of styrene, which is further used in the production of polystyrene and other polymers. Its importance lies in its role as a precursor to these versatile materials. Research on ethylbenzene focuses on areas such as its synthesis optimization, safer and more efficient production methods, environmental impact and remediation, and its potential health effects. Its volatility and potential for air pollution are areas of concern, with studies exploring the impact of ethylbenzene emissions on human health and the environment.'

Cross-References

ID SourceID
PubMed CID7500
CHEMBL ID371561
CHEBI ID16101
MeSH IDM0046113

Synonyms (93)

Synonym
BIDD:ER0246
20302-26-5
alpha-methyltoluene
CHEBI:16101 ,
un1175
ethylbenzeen [dutch]
hsdb 84
etylobenzen [polish]
nsc 406903
etilbenzene [italian]
einecs 202-849-4
ccris 916
ai3-09057
aethylbenzol [german]
eb
inchi=1/c8h10/c1-2-8-6-4-3-5-7-8/h3-7h,2h2,1h
benzene, ethyl-
ethyl-benzene
aethylbenzol
nsc406903
ethylbenzeen
nsc-406903
nci-c56393
ethyl benzene
etilbenzene
wln: 2r
etylobenzen
NCGC00090768-01
ethylbenzene ,
phenylethane
ethylenzene
100-41-4
ethylbenzol
C07111
GHL.PD_MITSCHER_LEG0.1024
pyj ,
70955-17-8
ethylbenzene, anhydrous, 99.8%
ethylbenzene [un1175] [flammable liquid]
bdbm50167951
CHEMBL371561 ,
QSPL 092
E0064
S0646
AKOS000120140
NCGC00090768-02
27536-89-6
ec 202-849-4
l5i45m5g0o ,
unii-l5i45m5g0o
dtxsid3020596 ,
NCGC00258617-01
dtxcid10596
tox21_201064
cas-100-41-4
68908-88-3
einecs 272-685-6
STL282714
FT-0626285
FT-0637975
ethyl-d5-benzene
158507-69-8
.alpha.-methyltoluene
ethylbenzene [hsdb]
ethylbenzene [usp-rs]
ethylbenzene [mi]
ethylbenzene [iarc]
1-ethylbenzene
etph
2618-00-0
ethyl-beta,beta,beta-d3-benzene
un 1175
mfcd00011647
J-521339
J-000128
F0001-0016
ethyl-alpha,alpha-d2-benzene-d5
ethylbenzene, analytical standard
ethylbenzene, united states pharmacopeia (usp) reference standard
ethylbenzene, reagentplus(r), 99%
ethylbenzene, pharmaceutical secondary standard; certified reference material
ethylbenzene 10 microg/ml in cyclohexane
ethylbenzene 100 microg/ml in cyclohexane
Q409184
AMY11052
1-phenylethane
BS-18982
ethyl-1-13c-benzene 99 atom % 13c
nci c56393
ethylbenzene (iarc)
ethylbenzene (usp-rs)
nsc 406903, phenylethane
Z104473632

Research Excerpts

Overview

Ethylbenzene is a hydrocarbon that is extensively used in both industry and in the home. It has been reported as toxic to various tissues. The available data do not support the genotoxic mechanism of ethylbenZene-induced tumors in kidney.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
"Ethylbenzene is a hydrocarbon that is extensively used in both industry and in the home and has been reported as toxic to various tissues. "( Ethylbenzene exposure disrupts ovarian function in Wistar rats via altering folliculogenesis and steroidogenesis-related markers and activating autophagy and apoptosis.
Aldahmash, W; Aldawood, N; Alrezaki, A; Alwasel, S; Harrath, AH; Jalouli, M; Mansour, L, 2022
)
3.61
"Ethylbenzene is an important industrial chemical, but its potential toxicity is a recent concern. "( Roles of oxidative stress, apoptosis, and heme oxygenase-1 in ethylbenzene-induced renal toxicity in NRK-52E cells.
Gu, Q; Liu, J; Wang, X; Wang, Y; Zhang, J; Zhang, M, 2016
)
2.12
"Ethylbenzene is an important industrial chemical that has recently been classified as a possible human carcinogen (International Agency of Research on Cancer class 2B), but the available data do not support the genotoxic mechanism of ethylbenzene-induced tumors in kidney. "( Involvement of mitochondria-mediated apoptosis in ethylbenzene-induced renal toxicity in rat.
Li, J; Liu, J; Wang, Q; Wang, Y; Yang, D; Yang, J; Zhang, M, 2010
)
2.06
"Ethylbenzene is an important industrial chemical that has recently been classified as a possible human carcinogen (IARC class 2B). "( A review of the genotoxicity of ethylbenzene.
Brusick, D; Henderson, L; Ratpan, F; Veenstra, G,
)
1.86
"Ethylbenzene is an important constituent of widely used solvent mixtures in industry. "( Biological monitoring of workers exposed to ethylbenzene and co-exposed to xylene.
Droz, PO; Jang, JY; Kim, S, 2001
)
2.01
"Ethylbenzene is an important industrial solvent and a key substance in styrene production. "( Stereometabolism of ethylbenzene in man: gas chromatographic determination of urinary excreted mandelic acid enantiomers and phenylglyoxylic acid and their relation to the height of occupational exposure.
Gfrörer, W; Herz, R; Korn, M; Wodarz, I; Wodarz, R, 1992
)
2.05

Effects

Ethylbenzene has a higher adsorption tendency on CNTs. More than 98% of it adsorbed in first 14 min, which is related to the low water solubility and the high molecular weight.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
"Ethylbenzene has a higher adsorption tendency on CNTs, so that more than 98% of it adsorbed in first 14 min, which is related to the low water solubility and the high molecular weight."( Ethylbenzene removal by carbon nanotubes from aqueous solution.
Amin, MM; Bina, B; Pourzamani, H; Rashidi, A, 2012
)
2.54
"Ethylbenzene has been evaluated for carcinogenic activity in Fischer rats and B6C3F1 mice exposed by inhalation (Chan et al., 1998; Chan, 1999) and in Sprague-Dawley rats after oral exposure (Maltoni et al., 1985,1997). "( Clarifying carcinogenicity of ethylbenzene.
Chan, P; Huff, J; Melnick, R, 2010
)
2.09
"Ethylbenzene has a higher adsorption tendency on CNTs, so that more than 98% of it adsorbed in first 14 min, which is related to the low water solubility and the high molecular weight."( Ethylbenzene removal by carbon nanotubes from aqueous solution.
Amin, MM; Bina, B; Pourzamani, H; Rashidi, A, 2012
)
2.54

Treatment

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
"Ethylbenzene (EB) treatment to male Holtzman rats was shown to alter the expression of cytochrome P-450s 1A1, 2B, 2C11, 2E1, and 3A, with several isozymes exhibiting complex multiphasic induction patterns when treated for 1 and 3 days with the alkylbenzene. "( Ethylbenzene modulates the expression of different cytochrome P-450 isozymes by discrete multistep processes.
Backes, WL; Cawley, GF; Eyer, CS; Haddican, MM; Serron, SC; Yuan, W, 1997
)
3.18

Toxicity

There were no adverse effects on reproductive performance in either the F0 or F1 parental generations exposed to up to 500 ppm ethylbenzene. The no observed adverse effect level (NOAEL) for maternal reproductive toxicity, developmental toxicity, and developmental neurotoxicity in this study was considered to be 500 ppm/342 mg/kg/day.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
" A no observed adverse effect level (NOAEL) of 382 ppm appears appropriate for rats and mice with a lowest observed adverse effect level (LOAEL) of 782 ppm."( Subchronic inhalation toxicity of ethylbenzene in mice, rats, and rabbits.
Clarke, EA; Cragg, ST; Daly, IW; Miller, RR; Ouellette, RE; Terrill, JB, 1989
)
0.56
" We examined toxic effects of three substances (ethylbenzene, nonylphenol, and bisphenol A), that are known to be hormonally active in many animals, on growth and development of two species of freshwater sponge."( Toxic effects of endocrine disrupters on freshwater sponges: common developmental abnormalities.
Hill, A; Hill, M; Stabile, C; Steffen, LK, 2002
)
0.57
"First, the developmental toxic potential of n-butyl acetate (BA) was examined in Sprague-Dawley rats following whole body inhalation exposure, 6 h day(-1), from day 6 to 20 of gestation, at concentrations of 0, 500, 1000, 2000 and 3000 ppm."( Developmental toxic effects of ethylbenzene or toluene alone and in combination with butyl acetate in rats after inhalation exposure.
Bourges-Abella, N; Gallissot, F; Muller, S; Sabaté, JP; Saillenfait, AM,
)
0.42
"This study was conducted to evaluate the potential adverse effects of whole-body inhalation exposure of F0 and F1 parental animals from a 2-generation reproduction study of ethylbenzene on nervous system functional and/or morphologic end points in the F2 offspring from four groups of male and female Crl:CD (SD)IGS BR rats."( Inhalation developmental neurotoxicity study of ethylbenzene in Crl-CD rats.
Banton, M; Beck, M; Faber, WD; Kirkpatrick, D; Moran, E; Regan, KS; Roberts, LS; Stump, DG; Tort, M, 2007
)
0.79
"There were no adverse effects on reproductive performance in either the F0 or F1 parental generations exposed to up to 500 ppm ethylbenzene [Faber et al."( Inhalation developmental neurotoxicity study of ethylbenzene in Crl-CD rats.
Banton, M; Beck, M; Faber, WD; Kirkpatrick, D; Moran, E; Regan, KS; Roberts, LS; Stump, DG; Tort, M, 2007
)
0.8
"The no observed adverse effect level (NOAEL) for maternal reproductive toxicity, developmental toxicity, and developmental neurotoxicity in this study was considered to be 500 ppm/342 mg/kg/day ethylbenzene, the highest exposure level tested in the study."( Inhalation developmental neurotoxicity study of ethylbenzene in Crl-CD rats.
Banton, M; Beck, M; Faber, WD; Kirkpatrick, D; Moran, E; Regan, KS; Roberts, LS; Stump, DG; Tort, M, 2007
)
0.78
" While, chemical analysis showed biodegradation of parent BTEX compounds in biologically active soils, the biosensor assays reported on changes in bioavailability and potentially toxic intermediate fractions as they estimated the integrative effect of contaminants."( Application of luminescent biosensors for monitoring the degradation and toxicity of BTEX compounds in soils.
Dawson, JJ; Iroegbu, CO; Maciel, H; Paton, GI, 2008
)
0.35
" The results extended the knowledge on toxic effects of toluene, ethylbenzene and xylene on aquatic plants."( Toxic effects of Hydrilla verticillata exposed to toluene, ethylbenzene and xylene and safety assessment for protecting aquatic macrophytes.
Yan, S; Zhou, Q, 2011
)
0.85
" The aim of this study was to evaluate the toxic effects of individual and mixed BTEX on Euglena gracilis (E."( Toxic effects of individual and combined effects of BTEX on Euglena gracilis.
Lee, JW; Ng, JC; Peng, C; Sichani, HT, 2015
)
0.42
" We investigated the toxic effects of ethylbenzene on liver and explored the mechanism of mitochondria-mediated apoptosis pathway."( Roles of oxidative damage and mitochondria-mediated apoptosis in ethylbenzene-induced hepatotoxic effects in rat.
Gu, Q; Wang, Y; Yang, D; Zhang, J; Zhang, M, 2015
)
0.93
"Benzene homologues have significant toxic effects to aquatic organisms."( Effective extrapolation models for ecotoxicity of benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, and xylene (BTEX).
Feng, C; Huang, Y; Li, L; Ling, J; Xu, J; Yan, Z; Zheng, L, 2020
)
0.79

Pharmacokinetics

A physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) model was developed for inhaled ethylbenzene (EB) in B6C3F1 mice. The model was used to simulate inhalation exposure to "low" or "high" air concentrations of benzene (Bz) or dichloromethane (DCM)

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
"The objective of the present study was to develop a physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) model for a ternary mixture of alkyl benzenes [toluene (TOL), m-xylene (XYL), and ethylbenzene (EBZ)] in rats and humans."( Physiologically based pharmacokinetic modeling of a ternary mixture of alkyl benzenes in rats and humans.
Brodeur, J; Charest-Tardif, G; Krishnan, K; Tardif, R, 1997
)
0.49
" The comparison of Cmax and the kinetic profile of EB in mice exposed to 75 ppm suggests that they are similar between 1-day and 7-day exposures."( Inhalation pharmacokinetics of ethylbenzene in B6C3F1 mice.
Charest-Tardif, G; Krishnan, K; Tardif, R, 2006
)
0.62
"A physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) model was developed for inhaled ethylbenzene (EB) in B6C3F1 mice."( Physiologically based modeling of the inhalation pharmacokinetics of ethylbenzene in B6C3F1 mice.
Charest-Tardif, G; Gargas, ML; Krishnan, K; Lewis, DF; Nong, A; Sweeney, LM; Tardif, R, 2007
)
0.8
" The toxicokinetics of these biomarkers following inhalation exposure have yet to be described by physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) modeling."( Human inhalation exposures to toluene, ethylbenzene, and m-xylene and physiologically based pharmacokinetic modeling of exposure biomarkers in exhaled air, blood, and urine.
Aranda-Rodriguez, R; Haddad, S; Marchand, A; Nong, A; Tardif, R, 2015
)
0.69
" Physiologically based pharmacokinetic models for adults (AD), neonates (NEO), toddlers (TODD), and pregnant women (PW) were used to simulate inhalation exposure to "low" (RfC-like) or "high" (AEGL-like) air concentrations of benzene (Bz) or dichloromethane (DCM), along with various levels of toluene alone or toluene with ethylbenzene and xylene."( Assessing human variability in kinetics for exposures to multiple environmental chemicals: a physiologically based pharmacokinetic modeling case study with dichloromethane, benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, and m-xylene.
Haddad, S; Valcke, M, 2015
)
0.78

Compound-Compound Interactions

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
" A significant reduction of fetal weight was associated with exposure to 1000 ppm EB alone, to either mixtures of EB with BA, or to 1500 ppm TOL alone or combined with BA at either concentration."( Developmental toxic effects of ethylbenzene or toluene alone and in combination with butyl acetate in rats after inhalation exposure.
Bourges-Abella, N; Gallissot, F; Muller, S; Sabaté, JP; Saillenfait, AM,
)
0.42
"For the first time, electromembrane extraction combined with liquid chromatography and tandem mass spectrometry was applied for the determination of urinary benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, and xylene metabolites."( Simultaneous determination of benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, and xylene metabolites in human urine using electromembrane extraction combined with liquid chromatography and tandem mass spectrometry.
Cho, HD; Eom, HY; Han, SB; Kim, J; Kim, U; Lee, HY; Suh, JH, 2015
)
0.87

Bioavailability

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
"Luminescent biosensors were able to monitor changes in contaminant toxicity and bioavailability in aqueous extracts from BTEX-impacted soils as degradation proceeded."( Application of luminescent biosensors for monitoring the degradation and toxicity of BTEX compounds in soils.
Dawson, JJ; Iroegbu, CO; Maciel, H; Paton, GI, 2008
)
0.35
" While, chemical analysis showed biodegradation of parent BTEX compounds in biologically active soils, the biosensor assays reported on changes in bioavailability and potentially toxic intermediate fractions as they estimated the integrative effect of contaminants."( Application of luminescent biosensors for monitoring the degradation and toxicity of BTEX compounds in soils.
Dawson, JJ; Iroegbu, CO; Maciel, H; Paton, GI, 2008
)
0.35
" One of the most important elements is root exudation, since it can affect the mobility, and therefore, the bioavailability of soil contaminants."( Influence of plant root exudates on the mobility of fuel volatile compounds in contaminated soils.
Balseiro-Romero, M; Kidd, PS; Monterroso, C, 2014
)
0.4
" The increasing diffusion distances of toluene or ethylbenzene to the solid Mn(IV) most likely caused limited bioavailability and hence resulted in the observed masking effect."( Characterization of toluene and ethylbenzene biodegradation under nitrate-, iron(III)- and manganese(IV)-reducing conditions by compound-specific isotope analysis.
Dorer, C; Neu, TR; Richnow, HH; Stryhanyuk, H; Vogt, C, 2016
)
0.97

Dosage Studied

DNA damage was induced significantly in snails exposed to ethylbenzene. The levels of DNA damage showed positive time-response and dose-response relationships. These methods have been applied to the study of the metabolic stereochemistry of ethyl Benzene and styrene in rats dosed orally and in human volunteers exposed to atmospheres containing these solvents.

ExcerptRelevanceReference
" These methods have been applied to the study of the metabolic stereochemistry of ethylbenzene and styrene in rats dosed orally (100 mg/kg body weight) and in human volunteers exposed to atmospheres containing these solvents at the upper limits prescribed for workplaces by the UK Health and Safety Executive (100 ppm in air)."( The metabolism of ethylbenzene and styrene to mandelic acid: stereochemical considerations.
Caldwell, J; Drummond, L; Wilson, HK, 1989
)
0.84
" These data suggest that consideration of the nature and magnitude of non-linear kinetics and induction of metabolism during repeated exposures is essential for the conduct of a scientifically sound analysis of EB cancer dose-response data collected in B6C3F1 mice."( Inhalation pharmacokinetics of ethylbenzene in B6C3F1 mice.
Charest-Tardif, G; Krishnan, K; Tardif, R, 2006
)
0.62
" The treatment was conducted in a semi-batch reactor under different experimental conditions by varying ozone gas dosage and incident UV light intensity."( Treatment of groundwater contaminated with gasoline components by an ozone/UV process.
Garoma, T; Gurol, MD; Osibodu, O; Thotakura, L, 2008
)
0.35
" Therefore, a repeated addition of moderate concentrations of H(2)O(2) proved to be more favourable than the addition of high concentrations at a single dosing port."( Development of a groundwater biobarrier for the removal of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, BTEX, and heterocyclic hydrocarbons.
Alt, S; Jacob, H; Müller, A; Schad, H; Tiehm, A; Weingran, C, 2008
)
0.35
" For the best separation and low back pressure, orthogonal experiments were carried out with V (cyclohexanol): V (dodecanol), V (GMA): V (DVB) and BPO dosage as the three main factors."( [Optimization of preparation of poly ( glycidyl methacrylate-divinylbenzene) monolithic column with orthogonal experiments for separation of small molecules].
Liu, Z; Ma, W; Ning, F; Xu, H, 2010
)
0.36
" DNA damage was induced significantly in snails exposed to ethylbenzene, and the levels of DNA damage showed positive time-response and dose-response relationships, and moreover the levels of DNA damage had no difference between the two different responses of snails."( Behavioral alteration and DNA damage of freshwater snail Bellamya aeruginosa stressed by ethylbenzene and its tissue residue.
Chen, C; Gao, J; Xiong, H; Zheng, S; Zhou, Q, 2012
)
0.84
" Toxicity reference values were derived from the available data, with physiologically based pharmacokinetic models and benchmark dose methods used to assess dose-response relationships."( Risk assessments for chronic exposure of children and prospective parents to ethylbenzene (CAS No. 100-41-4).
Banton, MI; Bus, JS; Gargas, ML; Gentry, PR; Kester, JE; Kirman, CR; Sweeney, LM, 2015
)
0.65
" Here, metabolic profiles for aniline (A), chloroform (CL), ethylbenzene (EB), 2-methoxyethanol (ME), N,N-dimethylformamide (DMF) and tetrahydrofurane (THF), dosed inhalatively for six hours/day, five days a week for 4 weeks were compared to oral dosing performed daily for 4 weeks."( Metabolite profiles of rats in repeated dose toxicological studies after oral and inhalative exposure.
Bordag, N; Fabian, E; Herold, M; Kamp, H; Krennrich, G; Looser, R; Ma-Hock, L; Mellert, W; Montoya, G; Peter, E; Prokudin, A; Spitzer, M; Strauss, V; van Ravenzwaay, B; Walk, T; Zbranek, R, 2016
)
0.68
[information is derived through text-mining from research data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Drug Classes (1)

ClassDescription
alkylbenzeneA monocyclic arene that is benzene substituted with one or more alkyl groups.
[compound class information is derived from Chemical Entities of Biological Interest (ChEBI), Hastings J, Owen G, Dekker A, Ennis M, Kale N, Muthukrishnan V, Turner S, Swainston N, Mendes P, Steinbeck C. (2016). ChEBI in 2016: Improved services and an expanding collection of metabolites. Nucleic Acids Res]

Pathways (1)

PathwayProteinsCompounds
ethylbenzene degradation (anaerobic)1124

Protein Targets (10)

Potency Measurements

ProteinTaxonomyMeasurementAverage (µ)Min (ref.)Avg (ref.)Max (ref.)Bioassay(s)
RAR-related orphan receptor gammaMus musculus (house mouse)Potency27.52830.006038.004119,952.5996AID1159521
retinoic acid nuclear receptor alpha variant 1Homo sapiens (human)Potency48.95300.003041.611522,387.1992AID1159555
retinoid X nuclear receptor alphaHomo sapiens (human)Potency32.20120.000817.505159.3239AID1159527; AID1159531
activating transcription factor 6Homo sapiens (human)Potency22.05450.143427.612159.8106AID1159516
cellular tumor antigen p53 isoform aHomo sapiens (human)Potency0.00630.316212.443531.6228AID924
thyroid hormone receptor beta isoform 2Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Potency69.14800.000323.4451159.6830AID743065
nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 isoform 1Homo sapiens (human)Potency0.03350.000627.21521,122.0200AID651741
Integrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)Potency0.00630.316211.415731.6228AID924
Integrin alpha-IIbHomo sapiens (human)Potency0.00630.316211.415731.6228AID924
[prepared from compound, protein, and bioassay information from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Activation Measurements

ProteinTaxonomyMeasurementAverageMin (ref.)Avg (ref.)Max (ref.)Bioassay(s)
EndolysinTequatrovirus T4Kd60.00003.00003.00003.0000AID238119; AID728447; AID728449
[prepared from compound, protein, and bioassay information from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Biological Processes (70)

Processvia Protein(s)Taxonomy
negative regulation of low-density lipoprotein receptor activityIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of protein phosphorylationIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of endothelial cell proliferationIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cell-matrix adhesionIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
cell-substrate junction assemblyIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
cell adhesionIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
cell-matrix adhesionIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
integrin-mediated signaling pathwayIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
embryo implantationIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
blood coagulationIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of endothelial cell migrationIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of gene expressionIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of macrophage derived foam cell differentiationIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of fibroblast migrationIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of lipid storageIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
response to activityIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
smooth muscle cell migrationIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of smooth muscle cell migrationIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
platelet activationIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of vascular endothelial growth factor receptor signaling pathwayIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
cell-substrate adhesionIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
activation of protein kinase activityIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of lipid transportIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of protein localizationIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of actin cytoskeleton organizationIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
cell adhesion mediated by integrinIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cell adhesion mediated by integrinIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of osteoblast proliferationIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
heterotypic cell-cell adhesionIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
substrate adhesion-dependent cell spreadingIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
tube developmentIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
wound healing, spreading of epidermal cellsIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to platelet-derived growth factor stimulusIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
apolipoprotein A-I-mediated signaling pathwayIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
wound healingIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
apoptotic cell clearanceIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of bone resorptionIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of angiogenesisIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of bone resorptionIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
symbiont entry into host cellIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
platelet-derived growth factor receptor signaling pathwayIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of fibroblast proliferationIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
mesodermal cell differentiationIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of smooth muscle cell proliferationIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of peptidyl-tyrosine phosphorylationIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of lipoprotein metabolic processIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
negative chemotaxisIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of release of sequestered calcium ion into cytosolIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of serotonin uptakeIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
angiogenesis involved in wound healingIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of ERK1 and ERK2 cascadeIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
platelet aggregationIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to mechanical stimulusIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to xenobiotic stimulusIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of glomerular mesangial cell proliferationIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
blood coagulation, fibrin clot formationIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
maintenance of postsynaptic specialization structureIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of postsynaptic neurotransmitter receptor internalizationIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of postsynaptic neurotransmitter receptor diffusion trappingIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of substrate adhesion-dependent cell spreadingIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of adenylate cyclase-inhibiting opioid receptor signaling pathwayIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of trophoblast cell migrationIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of extracellular matrix organizationIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to insulin-like growth factor stimulusIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of endothelial cell apoptotic processIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of T cell migrationIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
cell migrationIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of leukocyte migrationIntegrin alpha-IIbHomo sapiens (human)
cell-matrix adhesionIntegrin alpha-IIbHomo sapiens (human)
integrin-mediated signaling pathwayIntegrin alpha-IIbHomo sapiens (human)
angiogenesisIntegrin alpha-IIbHomo sapiens (human)
cell-cell adhesionIntegrin alpha-IIbHomo sapiens (human)
cell adhesion mediated by integrinIntegrin alpha-IIbHomo sapiens (human)
[Information is prepared from geneontology information from the June-17-2024 release]

Molecular Functions (21)

Processvia Protein(s)Taxonomy
fibroblast growth factor bindingIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
C-X3-C chemokine bindingIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
insulin-like growth factor I bindingIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
neuregulin bindingIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
virus receptor activityIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
fibronectin bindingIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
protease bindingIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
protein disulfide isomerase activityIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
protein kinase C bindingIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
platelet-derived growth factor receptor bindingIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
integrin bindingIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
protein bindingIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
coreceptor activityIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
enzyme bindingIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
identical protein bindingIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2 bindingIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
metal ion bindingIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
cell adhesion molecule bindingIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular matrix bindingIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
fibrinogen bindingIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
protein bindingIntegrin alpha-IIbHomo sapiens (human)
identical protein bindingIntegrin alpha-IIbHomo sapiens (human)
metal ion bindingIntegrin alpha-IIbHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular matrix bindingIntegrin alpha-IIbHomo sapiens (human)
molecular adaptor activityIntegrin alpha-IIbHomo sapiens (human)
fibrinogen bindingIntegrin alpha-IIbHomo sapiens (human)
integrin bindingIntegrin alpha-IIbHomo sapiens (human)
[Information is prepared from geneontology information from the June-17-2024 release]

Ceullar Components (30)

Processvia Protein(s)Taxonomy
glutamatergic synapseIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
nucleusIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
nucleoplasmIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
cell-cell junctionIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
focal adhesionIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
external side of plasma membraneIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
cell surfaceIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
apical plasma membraneIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
platelet alpha granule membraneIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
lamellipodium membraneIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
filopodium membraneIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
microvillus membraneIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
ruffle membraneIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
integrin alphav-beta3 complexIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
melanosomeIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
synapseIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
postsynaptic membraneIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular exosomeIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
integrin alphaIIb-beta3 complexIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
glycinergic synapseIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
integrin complexIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
protein-containing complexIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
alphav-beta3 integrin-PKCalpha complexIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
alphav-beta3 integrin-IGF-1-IGF1R complexIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
alphav-beta3 integrin-HMGB1 complexIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
receptor complexIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
alphav-beta3 integrin-vitronectin complexIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
alpha9-beta1 integrin-ADAM8 complexIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
focal adhesionIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
cell surfaceIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
synapseIntegrin beta-3Homo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneIntegrin alpha-IIbHomo sapiens (human)
focal adhesionIntegrin alpha-IIbHomo sapiens (human)
cell surfaceIntegrin alpha-IIbHomo sapiens (human)
platelet alpha granule membraneIntegrin alpha-IIbHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular exosomeIntegrin alpha-IIbHomo sapiens (human)
integrin alphaIIb-beta3 complexIntegrin alpha-IIbHomo sapiens (human)
blood microparticleIntegrin alpha-IIbHomo sapiens (human)
integrin complexIntegrin alpha-IIbHomo sapiens (human)
external side of plasma membraneIntegrin alpha-IIbHomo sapiens (human)
[Information is prepared from geneontology information from the June-17-2024 release]

Bioassays (13)

Assay IDTitleYearJournalArticle
AID728449Binding affinity to Enterobacteria phage T4 lysozyme L99A mutant expressed in Escherichia coli BL21(DE3) by isothermal titration calorimetry2013Journal of medicinal chemistry, Apr-11, Volume: 56, Issue:7
The impact of introducing a histidine into an apolar cavity site on docking and ligand recognition.
AID1134600Octanol-water partition coefficient, log P of the compound1977Journal of medicinal chemistry, Aug, Volume: 20, Issue:8
Hydrogen-bonding parameter and its significance in quantitative structure--activity studies.
AID1134601Hydrogen-bond basicity, pKHB of the compound1977Journal of medicinal chemistry, Aug, Volume: 20, Issue:8
Hydrogen-bonding parameter and its significance in quantitative structure--activity studies.
AID603957Octanol-water partition coefficient, log P of the compound2008European journal of medicinal chemistry, Apr, Volume: 43, Issue:4
QSPR modeling of octanol/water partition coefficient for vitamins by optimal descriptors calculated with SMILES.
AID238119Dissociation constant against T4 lysozyme mutant L99A2005Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jun-02, Volume: 48, Issue:11
Decoys for docking.
AID1149946Inhibition of alpha-chymotrypsin (unknown origin)1977Journal of medicinal chemistry, Nov, Volume: 20, Issue:11
Quantitative structure-activity relationship of chymotrypsin-ligand interactions.
AID1145576Octanol-water partition coefficient, log P of the compound1976Journal of medicinal chemistry, May, Volume: 19, Issue:5
Partition coefficients and surface areas of some alkylbenzenes.
AID1134599CHCl3-water partition coefficient, log P of the compound1977Journal of medicinal chemistry, Aug, Volume: 20, Issue:8
Hydrogen-bonding parameter and its significance in quantitative structure--activity studies.
AID346025Binding affinity to beta cyclodextrin2009Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Jan-15, Volume: 17, Issue:2
Convenient QSAR model for predicting the complexation of structurally diverse compounds with beta-cyclodextrins.
AID728447Binding affinity to Enterobacteria phage T4 lysozyme L99A/M102E double mutant expressed in Escherichia coli BL21(DE3) by isothermal titration calorimetry2013Journal of medicinal chemistry, Apr-11, Volume: 56, Issue:7
The impact of introducing a histidine into an apolar cavity site on docking and ligand recognition.
AID1145366Octanol-water partition coefficient, log P of the compound1976Journal of medicinal chemistry, May, Volume: 19, Issue:5
Application of SCAP to drug design. 1. Prediction of octanol-water partition coefficients using solvent-dependent conformational analyses.
AID728448Binding affinity to Enterobacteria phage T4 lysozyme L99A/M102Q double mutant expressed in Escherichia coli BL21(DE3) by isothermal titration calorimetry2013Journal of medicinal chemistry, Apr-11, Volume: 56, Issue:7
The impact of introducing a histidine into an apolar cavity site on docking and ligand recognition.
AID728450Binding affinity to Enterobacteria phage T4 lysozyme L99A/M102H double mutant expressed in Escherichia coli BL21(DE3) by isothermal titration calorimetry2013Journal of medicinal chemistry, Apr-11, Volume: 56, Issue:7
The impact of introducing a histidine into an apolar cavity site on docking and ligand recognition.
[information is prepared from bioassay data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Research

Studies (888)

TimeframeStudies, This Drug (%)All Drugs %
pre-199049 (5.52)18.7374
1990's87 (9.80)18.2507
2000's292 (32.88)29.6817
2010's352 (39.64)24.3611
2020's108 (12.16)2.80
[information is prepared from research data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Market Indicators

Research Demand Index: 71.00

According to the monthly volume, diversity, and competition of internet searches for this compound, as well the volume and growth of publications, there is estimated to be very strong demand-to-supply ratio for research on this compound.

MetricThis Compound (vs All)
Research Demand Index71.00 (24.57)
Research Supply Index6.82 (2.92)
Research Growth Index5.00 (4.65)
Search Engine Demand Index124.50 (26.88)
Search Engine Supply Index2.00 (0.95)

This Compound (71.00)

All Compounds (24.57)

Study Types

Publication TypeThis drug (%)All Drugs (%)
Trials3 (0.33%)5.53%
Reviews31 (3.40%)6.00%
Case Studies5 (0.55%)4.05%
Observational1 (0.11%)0.25%
Other873 (95.62%)84.16%
[information is prepared from research data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]