Deoxy sugar

Deoxy sugar
Ribofuranose-2D-skeletal.png

Deoxyribose.svg
Comparison of the chemical
structures of ribose (top)
and deoxyribose (bottom).

Deoxy sugars are sugars that have had a hydroxyl group replaced with a hydrogen atom.

Examples include:

External links



Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • deoxy sugar — noun Any compound formally derived from a sugar by replacing a hydroxy group by a hydrogen atom …   Wiktionary

  • deoxy sugar — a sugar in which one or more carbon atoms have been reduced, thus losing their hydroxyl groups …   Medical dictionary

  • deoxy sugar alcohol — noun A sugar alcohol in which one on more hydroxy groups have been replaced by hydrogen …   Wiktionary

  • Sugar — For other uses, see Sugar (disambiguation). For common table sugar, see Sucrose. White sugar redirects here. For the Joanne Shaw Taylor album, see White Sugar (album) …   Wikipedia

  • sugar — One of the sugars, q.v., pharmaceutical forms are compressible s. and confectioner s s.. SEE ALSO: sugars. [G. sakcharon; L. saccharum] amino sugars sugars in which a hydroxyl group has been replaced with an amino group; e.g., d glucosamine.… …   Medical dictionary

  • Reducing sugar — Reducing form of glucose A reducing sugar is any sugar that either has an aldehyde group or is capable of forming one in solution through isomerisation. This functional group allows the sugar to act as a reducing agent, for example in the Tollens …   Wikipedia

  • Monosaccharide nomenclature — is a set of conventions used in chemistry to name the compounds known as monosaccharides or simple sugars the basic structural units of carbohydrates, which cannot be hydrolysed into simpler units.[1] Contents 1 Systematic name of molecular graph …   Wikipedia

  • Deoxyribose — This article is about the naturally occurring D form of deoxyribose. For the L form, see L Deoxyribose. D Deoxyribose …   Wikipedia

  • Rhamnose — Rhamnose[1] IUPAC name (2 …   Wikipedia

  • Sucrose — Sucrose …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”