Archives for Chemistry Experiments of 82954-65-2

In some applications, this compound(82954-65-2)Synthetic Route of C6H13NO2 is unique.If you want to know more details about this compound, you can contact with the author or consult more relevant literature.

In general, if the atoms that make up the ring contain heteroatoms, such rings become heterocycles, and organic compounds containing heterocycles are called heterocyclic compounds. An article called Half-of-the-sites reactivity of outer-membrane phospholipase A against an active-site-directed inhibitor, published in 1999-03-31, which mentions a compound: 82954-65-2, Name is (S)-(2,2-dimethyl-[1,3]-dioxolan-4-yl)-methylamine, Molecular C6H13NO2, Synthetic Route of C6H13NO2.

The reaction of a novel active-site-directed phospholipase A1 inhibitor with the outer-membrane phospholipase A (OMPLA) was investigated. The inhibitor 1-p-nitrophenyl-octylphosphonate-2-tridecylcarbamoyl-3-ethanesulfonylamino-3-deoxy-sn-glycerol irreversibly inactivated OMPLA. The inhibition reaction did not require the cofactor calcium or an unprotonated active-site His142. The inhibition of the enzyme solubilized in hexadecylphosphocholine micelles was characterized by a rapid (t1/2 = 20 min) and complete loss of enzymic activity, concurrent with the covalent modification of 50% of the active-site serines, as judged from the amount of p-nitrophenolate (PNP) released. Modification of the remaining 50% occurred at a much lower rate, indicative of half-of-the-sites reactivity against the inhibitor of this dimeric enzyme. Inhibition of monomeric OMPLA solubilized in hexadecyl-N,N-dimethyl-1-ammonio-3-propanesulfonate resulted in an equimolar monophasic release of PNP, concurrent with the loss of enzymic activity (t1/2 = 14 min). The half-of-the-sites reactivity is discussed in view of the dimeric nature of this enzyme.

In some applications, this compound(82954-65-2)Synthetic Route of C6H13NO2 is unique.If you want to know more details about this compound, you can contact with the author or consult more relevant literature.

Reference:
Tetrahydropyran – Wikipedia,
Tetrahydropyran – an overview | ScienceDirect Topics