AHF NCI Collection
Nitrosation of Nornicotine and Nicotine in Gaseous and Aqueous Solutions
Fields
- Type
- Bibliography
- Chart/Graph
- Psci, Scientific Publication
- Chart/Graph
- Named Organization
- CTR, Council for Tobacco Research
- Characteristic
- Illegible
- Marginalia
- Team
- nitrosamines
- Author
- Dunger, M.
- Neurath, G.B.
- Pein, F.G.
- Neurath, G.B.
- Copied
- Bojorski, P.
- Gricivte, L. Sr
- Perini, F.
- Walker, E.A.
- Gricivte, L. Sr
- Named Person
- Bodenstein
- Gmelin
- Hoffman
- Klus
- Kuhn
- Lijinsky
- Neurath, G.B.
- Singer
- Gmelin
Document Images
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I~TTROS~ITION OF NORNICOTINE AND NICOTINE IN
~'` GASEOUS PWZ'IXTURES AND AQUEOUS SOLUTIONS
,.
G.B.~NEMTH,. M~ MCER & F.G. PEIN
L_Mi~croanaZyticaZ Laboratory,
FlamEncrg, FederaZ' RepubZzc o,f Germany
.. . -; . . , . .. .:, :... . ..., .. , . . ., .. , . .. ..-: :,: :. , ; . ,,. :'9' ': :
Rxus &' Kuhn (1973) reportedithe occurrence of 40'ng,nitrosonorni'cotine
(NNN) in smoke originating,from cigarettes containing tobacco particularly
richlin nornicotine (1.957)'. Hoffman et al. (1975) found 137.1 ng/cigarette
NNN in mainstream smoke from a US blended cigarette (85 mm). These authors
also discussed the formation of NNN from nicotine in relation to the re- .
sults of Lij'insky & Singer (,1975),, w.io reported that tertiary bases, in-
c]lud'ing,several widely-used drugs and other bases react with nitrite to
form 1V'-niltroso compounds. Hoffmann et al.(';1974) also reported' the pres-
ence of NNN'in unburned tobacco.
We therefore decided to study the kinetics of the reaction by wfi3ch
NNM'i's formed from nornicotine an& nicotine in gaseous mixtures containing,
the reactants in concentrations and'proportions cliosely approaching,those
of tobacco smoke. The setting,up of such~a model system is not too diffi-
¢ult with respect to nitric oxide and oxygen, but it is almost impossible
to d'o so for the alkaloids, which in the original smoke occur partly as
salts and free bases, partly dissolved' in other smoke constitutents andi
partly distributed in aerosol particles. This distribution of the alka-
loids, of course, influences their vapour pressure and,, consequently, their
access to the nitrosating agent, nitrogen trioxide which is formed from the
oxidizing nitric oxide and its reaction product, nitrogen dioxide.
As a first approach, we decided to use the alkaloids as free bases and
according to their vapour pressures at the respective temperatures;, these
cond'i'ti;ons rather favoured the nitrosating reaction. The nicotine involved,
wasspecially purified and contained less than 10img/kg niornicotine.
0
The unprotectedinornicotine - free base not retarded by intersolubil-
~
ity with other smoke constituents - was nitrosated to abomt-20%-a£ter five
minutes:the available time under normal smoking conditions i'sverymuch~ ~
shorter« Of purified n~icoti'neunderth~e sameconditi'ons gn1X ©'.6 ha Q~d
reacted to form NNN after 1'S minutes at room temperature: during in11.a-
tion and exhalation of one smoke puff the rate would be less by several~
' orders of magnitude.
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228 NEWRATH ET AL.
~
At 80 and 220°C no detectablle amounts of NNN were formed'. This is
obviously due to the negative temperature coefficient of the oxidation oE'
nitric oxide (Bodenstein, 1!9'18; Neurath et al.1)1and to the almost complete
cleavage of'nitrogenitrioxide, the nitrosating,agent, at those temperatures
and concentrations (G'nelin, 1936)4
In aqueous solutions the formation of NNN'was found to be highest at
pH 3'.8'; at pH 1!.5' and lower,, and' a't pFT' 5.2' and' higher,, almost no reaction
occurred,. The reaction rate was found tolbe slower in 1 NS buffer than in
0.2'M'buffer solutions. Nicotine,'like'many other tertiary amines
(Lijinsky 8' Singer, 1975), is nitrosated in'aqueous solutions but only at
a rate measurable in'parts per thousand over a period' of several hours.
With longer reaction_times there seemito be two pH-depend'ent maxima.
.
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NITROSATION OPNORN'ICOTINE' AND NICOTINE IN' GASE00&
M'ZXTURhTB' BY' NITRIC OR'IIDE'~ AND~ OXYGEN
t
In order tolapproach the conditions of nitrosation which occur in
tobacco smoke aerosols, a number of systems were d'eveloped'.
~
connected one to another with Teflon
Twolfour-necked 540 m1'flasks,
1 000 pS/'1 nitric oxide in nitrogen; and 101ul nornicotine or 50 yl1
tubing, were evacuated to about 0.1 mm Hg. "The first was filled with.
other and' air let in through the second, so that the whole system was °
through a septum into the second. The two flasks were opened'toleach
nicotine (with a nornicotine content of less than 10 mg/kg) were injected
adjusted to atmospheric pressure and to an oxygen concentration of about
Nornicotine andinicotine, as free bases, were introduced in concen-
luK:, corresponQing to that ot clgarette'smoKe.
was an excess of nitric oxide at 22'0C and an excess of tobacco alkaloids
trations according,to their vapour pressures at 22 and18'0°C, i'.e. there
at.80pC.
The reactions were followed by gas chromatographic determination of'
NNN, which was isolated by extraction of the gas mixtures with 10'ml' di-
chloromethane at various time intervals, a new run being made for eachh
measurement. To verify whether all the NNN'was thus extracted, sequential
extractions were carried out,,which revealed' that nolfurther tANN was
present in the extracted systems.
22°C less than 1% hadibeen nitrosated'.
dary bases. Nicotine was also found to form,NNN, but after 15'minutes at
the gas phase, reacts fairly rapidly in a manner similar to other secon-
phase as to the proportion of salt to free base and access of free base to
components, i.e., und'er optimal' conditions for reaction'in the gaseous
ti'ne, as the free base and not hindered by'intersolubility with other
The results are.summarized in Tables 1' and 2, which show that nornieo-
to the fact that because of the negative temperature coefficient of the
At 80 and 220PC no NNN is formed from nicotine. This seems to be due
1 See p. 219.
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NITROSATION OF NORNI'COTINE AND'NZCOTINE 229
~ " . . .. .. . .. . __. . ., ~ . - '. ,i.
Table 1. Nitrosonornicotine '(iNN~N)~ formation frow nornicotine in gaseous
mixture~s~~ of~ oxi'diiz~iimg~~ n~itriic oxid'e~ at 2'5°C
Time~ NNN formed (ug)i
(miim) ~_ run 1 trwn 2
5; . 375 390
~
10 490! 502
15 580 586
30! 686
60 "765
960 997:
ox'3d'ationlof nitric oxide almost no ni'trogen dioxide canibe formedi. Fur-
thermore, under these conditions the nitrogen dioxide which, is formed does
notcombin~ewith:theabundant nitric oxid'eto forminit'rogen trioxide,the, nitrosating agent, because
the equilibrium of the reaction
Nfl + N02 ~" N20'3 '
at those temperatures is shifted'far to the left. 'At 100°C, for instance,,
and 0.0'1 atm only 0.03% of nitrogen dioxide appears inithe form of nitrogen
trioxide;, in totiacco, smoke, however, the partial pressure of nitric oxidee
is only 0.0005 atm.
These results wouid' suggest that the formation of NNN from nicotine
in cigarette smoke makes no real contribution to the nitrosamine content
of smoke during,the short time involved im the inhalation and exhalation
of a smoke puff' during smoking.
Table 2. Nitrosonorni'cotine (NNN) formation from nicotine in gaseous
mixtures of oxidrizing ni'tric oxide at 25°C
Time ~: NNNi.+' ° .
(min~), ~ fiormedl
(ug)
% of nicotine
ni't'rosat'ed,,
caliculated' from
vapour pressure
e:
1.5 4'. 7 0.86'.
30 9.5 1'.73'
60 15.8 2'.88'
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230
NEURATH ET AL.
VELOCITY' OF' NITROSATION OF NORNICOTINE IN AQUEOUS
SOLUTIONS,AT' DIFFERENT pH VALUES'
erimentaZ
s
=ra
0
0
1
In these nitrosation experiments 9'.5 ml of 0.2'or 1.ZVf buffer solution
were stirred with~ 81.1 l:imol (T2' mg) norni'cotine and 500 }tmol (U0.5 ml) 1' N'
sodium nitrite at ambient temperature.
pH values were determined' us3ng,an electrometric pH meter equiped `~
with a glass electrode, before addition of the nitrite solution which
causes a positive shift of about 0'.2'units. , V
At different time intervals varying from 5-60 minutes, 0.5 ml samples
were taken and extracted' with 0'.1 ml dichloromethane, and 2'ul were in-
jectedlinto the port of a gas chromatograph for NNN determination. Gas
chromatographic conditions were as follows: Varian Aerograph 1445; 3 mi
glass column, 2' mm ID; 52 Silar lOC on Gaschrom P'DMCS, 100-120,mesh;
column temperature, 250°C; injection port temperature, 250°C; flame
.ionizati'onidetector temperature, 250PC; gas flow, 30 ml nitrogen;/min,
retention tiine for NNN 61mini.
For the kinetic evaluation, the inverse of the concentration of'un- '
reacted'nornicotine is plotted against time; the slope of'the resulting
line is a measure of the reactionlrate.
Resutta
be 3.8'for the nitrosation of nornicotinie in 0.2'and'1 M'buffer'systems
-(FY'gs 1-3). At pH 5.2' and higher, and at pH'1.5, almost no nitrosation
tions at controlled pH val:ues, from 1.5 to 7.3, showed the optimal pH to
Gns:chromatographic measurement of tti~eNNN' formed i~niaquieous solu-
oacurred. At pH 3.8 and lower,, decomposition of the unstable free nitrous
acid competes with the nitrosation reaction. A considerable inhibition,
of nitrosation1was observed with L M buffers as compared withr0'.2 M sys-
tems (Figs 1 &2).
~
The remarkable influence of pH on the rate of nitrosa!tion of niornico-
tine which may be of importance in the trapping,of tobacco smoke in ~
ll
eous s
stems
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[NNN ]
plotted'at different pH values (Fig. 3). $1
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INIITR4SATION' OF NORNICOTINE AN© NI'COTINE' 231
FIG. 1.~ NI~TROSONO~RN~IC0T11NE~ (NNN)! FORMATIONI IN~
®..2 MI BUFFER AT VARIOUS pHi V'ALUES
1
50
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p~H~~ 30
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pH 4.1
pH 4.4
3
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0:0'8'
0:06
10 20 30 40,
t i m e jm iin)'
pH 5:2.

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232 NEURATH ET AL.
FIG. 2'. NIITROSQNORNICOTiINE (NNN) FO'RMATI~.ONI IN
: 1i.0 MBUFFER AT VARIOU5' pH VALUES
0.22
0.2
r
IJ'~. . . . .. ..2
10 201 30 40 50 60
L'
50 60
IPH3.8
pH 3.6'
PH 3.4
PH 4.01
pH 4:a
PH 4.4
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WHI 4.8'
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GD,
;.,
E9
Q
0.18.
0.16
0.1141
i 0.12
04 1
0 08
M06
20 30 40'
tilme(miml

tand([NNN]'-t)
Lf
IL 0
0.9
04
.
03
0.6
-0.5
03
02
NITROSATIICMJ OF NORNI'COTINE' AND NICOTINE
FIG. 3. EFFECT OF"pH ONIRATE OF'
NITROSATION OF NORNICOTINE
decomposition of'
nitrous acild'
t M buFf'er
p12,M1 buffer
r,
5
0
4
,
.4
2' 3 3.21 3.4 3!6' 3.8 4 4;2 4.4 4.6 4.8 ~
PM
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234
ResuZts
VELOCITY OF NITROSATION OF NICOT7[NE' IN' AQI7EOUS
SOLUTIONS AT DIFFERENT pH VALUES'
For comparison with the above study, a similar one was carried'
the nitrosation of nicotine in aqueous soluti'ons.,
eri:merttaZ
For nitrosation, about 9'm1 of 0.2 M buffer solution were stirred'
with 100 ul of specially purified nicotine and 0.5 ml 1' N sodium nitrilte
soluition at 22'or 80°C. The pH values of the solutions were measured
with an electrometric pH meter equipped with a gl'ass electrode. At the
time intervals shown in Tables 3 and 4' 0.5 ml samples of'the solution
were taken, made alkaline with aqueous potassium carbonate solution and'
extracted with 100 pl dich,l'oromethane; of the extract 2'ul were taken for
gas chromatographic d'etermination. The extraction procedure was carried
out at the various pH values used in the experiment: noldifference due to
pHl of the extracted solution was found.
Gas chromatographic conditions were as followss Hewlett-Packard'H°'
1'5751 g,; 1.5m, glass bead column, washed with~1% Silar 5CR'in chlioroform;f
temperature programme,, 70--120°C, at 4°C/m3.ni; injectioniport temperature,
'.2'70PC; flame ionization d'etector temperature, 330°C; gas flows, 30 ml
nitrog,en/min 3'0' ml hydiogen/min 500'ml' air/'mi'n.
Purification of nicotine was carried out by dissolving 15'g nicotine
in 1 Nc hyd'rochloric acid brought to pH 3.65 with buffer. About 2 g, sodium
nitrite were added and the solution stirred'for 36 hours. After acidify-
ing w3th 10', hydrochloric acid', the mixture was extracted three times with
d'ichloromethane; the remainder was made alkaline with,50R potassium hy-
droxide solution and extracted wi'thieLher. After removal' of the ether'the
yniicotine was purified by distil'lationiin vacuo. The boiling-point was
determined' as 119°C'. No traces of'nornicotine appeared in the gas chromar-
togram.
'IN
Hoffmann et al. ('1975) reported yields of 11-7Z NNN' after one hour,
depending,onithe pHivalue; however, no data on the purity of the nicotine
used was giuen,.
In order to avoid'interference from nornicotine almost always present
inisamples of natural nicotine, it was purified by nitrosation and separa-
tion of nornicotine by d'istillation. The purity of the resulting nicotine,,
determined by gas chromatography, was 9'9'.9%;' the final nornicotine con-
tent was less than 10 mg/kg.
Gas chromatographic measurement of the NNNiformed at 22°C in aqueous
sol:utions at measured' pH values varying, from 1.7 to 6.6' showed! that after
only one hour at pH 1.7' and pH' 2'.5,, 0.32' and 0'.2'0,g/'kg respectively, of
the nicotiine,, had been nitrosated. The highest amounts measured!in the
series were obtained after eight days at pH 4.0-5'.0 when 3'.3 g/kg NNN
were found (Table 3').

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NITROSATION' OF NORNIiCOTI'NE ANDNICOTIiNE 235
Table 3. N'iltrosonornicotine formed (g/lkg, of nicotine reacted)at 22'°C at.
different pH val;ues ~
Time pH 1 1. 7, pHi 2.5 pH 4.0' pH 4.2 pH 5.0 ' pH 6.61
30 min 0.21 0.1'0' ND, ND ND ND'
, . . ,. .
: .
60 mi'n 0'.32 0.20 ND ND, ND ND
2 h, 0.81 0.28' trace . trace trace N,D
4' hi 0.87 0.46 trace trace trace `' ND
21 h 1.13 01.49 1.4.. 1.4 1.0 trace
28'h - -
2.1 1 -
1.7 1.1
2'd'ays 1.21 . 0.49' 2.2' 1.6 1.8 trace
3 days - - 2.3 2.3 2'.3 -
4 days 1.38 0'.4& - - - 0.21
8 days 1.41 01.51' 3.3 3.3 3.3 0.32'
13 days _ _ 3.0 3.0 3.0' -
NDl- not detected
Table 4. Nitrosonornicotine (NNN)' formed
and pH 3.82' (I% of nicoti~ne reacted), at 80'0C
Time N,NN
(min)I
5
15
30,
[me
45
:nt 60
.a_
1'00!
:ne,
120
150
es 1801
s
210
300'
48 hi
1.23'
3.15
4.88
'
- 6.0'6
6.42
7.81r
8.49~
8.491
8.49'
8!.49'
8.49
6.00

At longer reaction times, 21 hours and more,, there appear to be two pHH
maxima corresponding,to two different paths of reaction; however, this
finding was not pursued further. -
The reaction proceeded faster at 80°C: after five minutes at pH 3.8
served being, reached af ter two hours when 8.49% NNN were f ormed' (Tab1'e 4).
more than 17% of the nicotine had already reacted,,, the highest values ob-
This study was supported by US Council for.Tobacco
Research Grant No. 891.
nornicotine in tobacco. Science,, 18fi,, 265-267
Hoffmann, D., Hecht, S'.S., Ornaf, R.M. & Wynder,, E.L. (1974) N'-Nitroso-
p. 738
Gmelin (1936) Handbuch de2" anorganischen Chemie, 8.Auf1. 4/3, Weinheim
und Sauerstoff. Z. EZektrochem., 24, 183'
Bodenstein, M. (1918) Die Geschwindigkeit der'Reaktion zwischeniS'tickoxyd
Research on Cancer (rARC'Ecientific Publications No.9') pp. 111-114.
Ntitroso Compounds ire the Envirorvnent, Lyon, International Agency for
amines and nitrous acid. In: Bogovski, P. & Walker, E.A., ed.,,IV-
Lijinksy,, W. &' Singer, G.M. (1975) Formation of nitroscanines from tertiary
Tabakregie, 14, 251-257
Rauchkondensat nornikotinreicher Zigaretten. Fachl. M2:tt. t3sterr.
Klus~, H.~&Kuhn, H., (1973')~ D~ie~Bestimmung desNorn2ko~tinnitro~samines~~im
tions No.9), pp. 159-165
International Agency for~Research~on~ Cancer (IARC~Scien~tif'i'c~ Publica~-~
P. & Walker,, E.A.,, ed., N-N'itroso Compounds in the Environment,,, Lyon,
volatiZe N-nitrosamines and hydrazines in cigarette smoke. In: Bogovski,,
smoke. XXVI. On the isolation and'i!dentifieation of'volatile and non-
Hoffmann D., Rathkamp, G. & Liu,, Y.Y. (1975) Chemical' studies on tobacco
