From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Muramic acid
|
Names
|
Preferred IUPAC name
2-[3-Amino-2,5-dihydroxy-6-(hydroxymethyl)oxan-4-yl]oxypropanoic acid
|
Systematic IUPAC name
2-{[3-Amino-2,5-dihydroxy-6-(hydroxymethyl)oxan-4-yl]oxy}propanoic acid
|
Identifiers
|
|
- 1114-41-6 N
|
3D model (JSmol)
|
|
3DMet
|
|
|
2334586
|
ChEBI
|
|
ChemSpider
|
|
ECHA InfoCard
|
100.012.923
|
EC Number
|
|
KEGG
|
|
|
- 441038 (2R),(3R,4R,5S,6R)
- 12313001 (),(3R,4R,5S,6R)
- 44123550 (2R),(2R,4R,6R)
- 45039974 (2R),()
- 433580
|
UNII
|
|
InChI=1S/C9H17NO7/c1-3(8(13)14)16-7-5(10)9(15)17-4(2-11)6(7)12/h3-7,9,11-12,15H,2,10H2,1H3,(H,13,14)/t3-,4-,5-,6-,7-,9-/m1/s1 NKey: MSFSPUZXLOGKHJ-KTZFPWNASA-N N
|
CC(OC1C(N)C(O)OC(CO)C1O)C(O)=O
|
Properties
|
|
C9H17NO7
|
Molar mass
|
251.23378
|
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
|
N (what is YN ?)
|
Infobox references
|
|
|
Chemical compound
Muramic acid is an amino sugar acid. In terms of chemical composition, it is the ether of lactic acid and glucosamine. It occurs naturally as N-acetylmuramic acid in peptidoglycan, whose primary function is a structural component of many typical bacterial cell walls.[1].
References[]
Categories:
- Sugar acids
- Amino sugars
- Amine stubs
Hidden categories:
- Chemical articles with multiple compound IDs
- Multiple chemicals in an infobox that need indexing
- Chemical articles with multiple PubChem CIDs
- Articles without InChI source
- Chembox CAS registry number not linked
- Articles with changed CASNo identifier
- Articles with changed EBI identifier
- Articles with changed ChemSpider identifier
- ECHA InfoCard ID from Wikidata
- Articles with changed FDA identifier
- Articles with changed InChI identifier
- Pages using collapsible list with both background and text-align in titlestyle
- Articles containing unverified chemical infoboxes
- Articles with short description
- Short description matches Wikidata
- All stub articles