“…Furthermore, a stable carbinolamine, hydroxymethylpentamethylmelamine, was detected as a metabolite in mouse plasma (Abikhalil et al, 1986) and rat liver microsomes (Ames et al, 1983) because the adjacent substituents delocalize the lone pair nitrogen electrons and stabilize the carbinolamine. In addition, stable carbinolamines have been isolated or detected as metabolites to a number of drugs including benzamides (Huizing et al, 1980), carbamates (Dorough and Casida, 1964), procarbazine (Weinkam and Shiba, 1978), N-methylcarbazole (Ebner et al, 1991), medazepam (Schwartz and Kolis, 1972), verapamil (Walles et al, 2002), pyrimidinyl-pyridopyrazines (Prakash and Soliman, 1997), and ecabapide (Fujimaki et al, 1995). Quinone is known as an electron-withdrawing group by resonance (Hiramatsu et al, 1983).…”