Barium cation (BioCAD00000007080)
Metabolite Card
Formula: Ba (137.9052)
SMILES: [Ba++]
Synonyms [en]
Ba2+; barium(2+); BARIUM ION; Barium; Ba(2+); barium(2+) ion
Last reviewed on 2024-06-28.
Cite this Page
Barium cation. 数据之源,洞见之始. SMRUCC genomics institute, a synthetic life researcher from China.
https://biocad_registry.innovation.ac.cn/s/(-)-arctiin
(retrieved
2026-01-03) (CAD Registry RN: BioCAD00000007080). Licensed
under the Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0).
Note
Barium is a dense alkaline earth metal that occurs in nature as a divalent cation in combination with other elements. Physiologically, it exists as an ion in the body. In addition to its natural presence in the Earth's crust, and therefore its natural occurrence in most surface waters, barium is also released to the environment via industrial emissions. The residence time of barium in the atmosphere may be up to several days. Barium sulfate exists as a white orthorhombic powder or crystals. Barite, the mineral from which barium sulfate is produced, is a moderately soft crystalline white opaque to transparent mineral. The most important impurities are iron(III) oxide, aluminium oxide, silica, and strontium sulfate.Barium sulfate has a low toxicity and relatively high density of about 4.5 g·cm-3 (and thus opacity to X-rays). For this reason it is used as a radiocontrast agent in X-ray imaging of the digestive system ("barium meals" and "barium enemas"). Lithopone, a pigment that contains barium sulfate and zinc sulfide, is a permanent white that has good covering power, and does not darken when exposed to sulfides. (Wikipedia). Barium hydroxide is strongly alkaline and therefore corrosive. Barium nitrate caused mild skin irritation and severe eye irritation in rabbits. The lack of reports of skin or eye irritation in humans, despite its widespread use, suggests that barium sulfate, often used as a contrast medium, is not a strong irritant. Useful information on the sensitization potential of barium compounds was not identified. Oral intake from drinking water and food is the most prevalent route of exposure to barium compounds for the general population. For the occupational environment, data from industry in the United Kingdom and predictions made using the Estimation and Assessment of Substance Exposure (EASE) model suggest that exposures can be controlled to less than 10 mg/m3 8 hours time weighted average (total inhalable dust). In some situations, control will be to levels significantly below this value. Short term exposures may be higher than 10 mg/m3 for some tasks.The critical end points in humans for toxicity resulting from exposure to barium and barium compounds appear to be hypertension and renal function. Using a no observed adverse effect level (NOAEL) in humans of 0.21 mg barium/kg body weight per day, a tolerable intake value of 0.02 mg/kg body weight per day for barium and barium compounds has been developed in this document.Dissolved barium in aquatic environments may represent a risk to aquatic organisms such as daphnids, but it is apparently of lesser risk to fish and aquatic plants, although data are limited. No adverse effects have been reported in ecological assessments of terrestrial plants or wildlife, although some plants are known to bioaccumulate barium from the soil.(Concise international chemical assessment document 33; http://www.inchem.org/documents/cicads/cicads/cicad33.htm).
DBLinks
- CAS Registry Number: 22541-12-4
- PubChem CID: 104810
- ChEBI: 37136
- HMDB: HMDB0004142
- LipidMaps:
- KEGG: C13881
- BioCyc:
- NCBI MeSH:
- Wikipedia: Barium
Other DBLinks
- CAS Registry Number: 22541-12-4
- CAS Registry Number: 7440-39-3
- PubChem: 104810
- ChEBI: ChEBI:37136
- HMDB: HMDB0004142
- KEGG: C13881
- Wikipedia: Barium
Class / Ontology
- WishartLab ClassyFire: [Homogeneous alkaline earth metal compounds] Homogeneous alkaline earth metal compounds
- ChEBI: [CHEBI:37136] barium(2+)
Taxonomy Source
Pathway Synthetic
| pathway id | name |
|---|---|
| BioCyc:META_1CMET2-PWY | N10-formyl-tetrahydrofolate biosynthesis |
| BioCyc:META_PWY-6390 | (S,S)-butanediol biosynthesis |
| BioCyc:META_PWY-6396 | superpathway of 2,3-butanediol biosynthesis |
| BioCyc:META_PWY-6609 | adenine and adenosine salvage III |
| BioCyc:META_ALL-CHORISMATE-PWY | superpathway of chorismate metabolism |
| BioCyc:ECO_PWY-6612 | superpathway of tetrahydrofolate biosynthesis |
| BioCyc:META_PWY-7644 | heparin degradation |
| BioCyc:META_PWY-6612 | superpathway of tetrahydrofolate biosynthesis |
| BioCyc:META_PWY-6021 | nitrilotriacetate degradation |
| BioCyc:META_PWY-6388 | (S,S)-butanediol degradation |
| BioCyc:META_PWY-5327 | superpathway of L-lysine degradation |
| BioCyc:META_PWY-5280 | L-lysine degradation IV |
| BioCyc:META_PWY-6614 | tetrahydrofolate biosynthesis |
| BioCyc:ECO_PWY-6609 | adenine and adenosine salvage III |
| BioCyc:ECO_1CMET2-PWY | N10-formyl-tetrahydrofolate biosynthesis |
| BioCyc:ECO_PWY-6614 | tetrahydrofolate biosynthesis |
| BioCyc:META_FOLSYN-PWY | superpathway of tetrahydrofolate biosynthesis and salvage |
| BioCyc:ECO_ALL-CHORISMATE-PWY | superpathway of chorismate metabolism |
| WikiPathways:WP5407 | 15q11q13 copy number variation |