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  2. Pyranose - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyranose

    In organic chemistry, pyranose is a collective term for saccharides that have a chemical structure that includes a six-membered ring consisting of five carbon atoms and one oxygen atom (a heterocycle). There may be other carbons external to the ring.

  3. Category:Pyranoses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Pyranoses

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  4. D-Ribose pyranase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D-Ribose_Pyranase

    Ribose can either be a five membered ring or a six membered ring . The furanose form is more useful for cells, as it can be used in other reactions. For most cells, ribose is transported into the cell in the pyranose form. With this said, D-Ribose Pyranase needs to be present to convert the pyranose form into the furanose form.

  5. Anomeric effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anomeric_effect

    The α- and β-anomers of D-glucopyranose.. In organic chemistry, the anomeric effect or Edward-Lemieux effect (after J. T. Edward and Raymond Lemieux) is a stereoelectronic effect that describes the tendency of heteroatomic substituents adjacent to the heteroatom in the ring in, e.g., tetrahydropyran to prefer the axial orientation instead of the less-hindered equatorial orientation that ...

  6. Glucuronic acid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glucuronic_acid

    The nonplanar pyranose rings can assume either chair (in 2 variants) or boat conformation. The preferred conformation depends on spatial interference or other interactions of the substituents. The pyranose form of D -glucose and its derivative D -glucuronic acid prefer the chair 4 C 1 .

  7. Hexose - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hexose

    The reaction turns the =O group into a hydroxyl, and the hydroxyl into an ether bridge (−O−) between the two carbon atoms, thus creating a ring with one oxygen atom and four or five carbons. If the cycle has five carbon atoms (six atoms in total), the closed form is called a pyranose, after the cyclic ether tetrahydropyran, that has the ...

  8. Mannose - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mannose

    Mannose commonly exists as two different-sized rings, the pyranose (six-membered) form and the furanose (five-membered) form. Each ring closure can have either an alpha or beta configuration at the anomeric position. The chemical rapidly undergoes isomerization among these four forms. [citation needed]

  9. Anomer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anomer

    This effect is especially noticeable in pyranoses and other six-membered ring compounds. This is a major factor in water. Hydrogen bonds between the anomeric group and other groups on the ring, leading to stabilization of the anomer. Dipolar repulsion between the anomeric group and other groups on the ring, leading to destabilization of the anomer.