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Theacrine

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Theacrine httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons00

Theacrine, also known as 1,3,7,9-tetramethyluric acid, is a purine alkaloid found in CupuaƧu (Theobroma grandiflorum) and in a Chinese tea known as kudingcha (Camellia assamica var. kucha). It shows anti-inflammatory and analgesic effects and appears to affect adenosine signalling in a manner similar to caffeine. In kudingcha leaves, theacrine is synthesized from caffeine in what is thought to be a three-step pathway.

Contents

Similarity to caffeine

Theacrine is similar to caffeine with an additional methyl group in the 5-position, and a carbamide as a result of higher oxidation state at the 6-position.

Safety

Theacrine has demonstrated clinical safety and non-habituating effects in healthy humans over 8 weeks of daily use at up to 300 mg/day. Moreover, there was no evidence of tachyphylaxis that is typical of neuroactive agents such as caffeine and other stimulants.

In animal studies, theacrine has an LD50 of 810 mg/kg, compared to 265 mg/kg for caffeine.

References

Theacrine Wikipedia