Methyl salicylate

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Image:Salicylic acid methyl ester chemical structure.png

{{{name|Methyl salicylate}}}
[[Image:{{{image|Methyl salicylate}}}.jpg|200px|Methyl salicylate]]
Chemical name Methyl salicylate}}}
Chemical formula C8H8O3}}}
Molecular mass 152.1494}}} g/mol
CAS number 119-36-8}}}]
Density 1.174}}} g/cm3
Melting point 19.4}}} °C
Boiling point 220 - 224}}} °C
SMILES xxx}}}
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Methyl salicylate (chemical formula C6H4(HO)COOCH3; also known as salicylic acid methyl ester, oil of wintergreen, betula oil, methyl ester) is a natural product of many species of plants. Some of the plants producing it are called wintergreens, hence the common name.

Contents

Botanical background

Methyl salicylate may be toxic especially when taken internally, and plants containing methyl salicylate may have evolved it as an anti-herbivore defence. Aside from its toxicity, methyl salicylate may be used by plants as a pheremone to warn other plants of pathogens such as tobacco mosaic virus [1]. If the plant is infested with herbivorous insects, the release of methyl salicylate may function as an exopheremone aid in the recruitment of beneficial insects to kill the herbivourous insects (PMID 15537163). Numerous plants produce methyl salicylate in very small amounts.

Plants producing it in significant amounts (readily detected by scent) include:


Commercial production

Structurally, it is methylated salicylic acid. Hence, it can be produced from the condensation reaction of salicylic acid and methanol. Commercial methyl salicylate is now synthesized, but in the past, it was commonly distilled from the twigs of Sweet Birch (Betula lenta) and Eastern Teaberry (Gaultheria procumbens).

Uses

It is used as a rubefacient in deep heating liniments, and in small amounts as a flavouring agent. It is also used to provide fragrance to various products.

It also has the property of fluorescence, converting ultraviolet light into visible blue light.

Methyl Salicylate also has the ability to clear plant or animal tissue samples of colour, and as such is useful for microscopy and immunohistochemistry when excess pigments obscure structures or block light in the tissue being examined. This clearing generally only takes a few minutes, but the tissue must first be dehydrated in alcohol.

External links

Toxicity:

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