Many small molecules occur naturally as "messenger" chemicals which regulate the behaviour and functions of microbes, plants, insects and animals. Examples include hormones, pheromones, phytoalexins, and antifeedants. These biofunctional molecules are of great interest to researchers in helping deve
Chemical Synthesis of Hormones, Pheromones and Other Bioregulators (Mori/Chemical Synthesis of Hormones, Pheromones and Other Bioregulators) || Synthesis of Biofunctional Molecules of Microbial Origin
โ Scribed by Mori, Kenji
- Publisher
- John Wiley & Sons, Ltd
- Year
- 2010
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 948 KB
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Article
- ISBN
- 0470697245
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Synthesis of Biofunctional Molecules of Microbial Origin
Micro-organisms produce hormones and pheromones so as to regulate their own lives. They also generate diverse secondary metabolites such as toxins and antibiotics to control the lives of the organisms. Some of the secondary metabolites possess rather complicated structures, and have attracted the attention of chemists. Medicinally important antibiotics were especially well studied. This chapter describes our synthetic works on biofunctional molecules of microbial origin.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Many small molecules occur naturally as "messenger" chemicals which regulate the behaviour and functions of microbes, plants, insects and animals. Examples include hormones, pheromones, phytoalexins, and antifeedants. These biofunctional molecules are of great interest to researchers in helping deve
mauritianus, 258 agelasphins, 258 AI-2 see autoinducer-2 Alectra vogelii, 63-4 alectrol, 63 Aleuroglyphus ovatus, 147 1-alkyn-3-ols, 256 allelochemicals, 2, 59-67 allomones, 2, 59 ambrosia beetle see Gnathotrichus sulcatus American cockroach see Periplaneta americana Ampulliferina sp., 219 analytica
Many small molecules occur naturally as "messenger" chemicals which regulate the behaviour and functions of microbes, plants, insects and animals. Examples include hormones, pheromones, phytoalexins, and antifeedants. These biofunctional molecules are of great interest to researchers in helping deve
Many small molecules occur naturally as "messenger" chemicals which regulate the behaviour and functions of microbes, plants, insects and animals. Examples include hormones, pheromones, phytoalexins, and antifeedants. These biofunctional molecules are of great interest to researchers in helping deve