indole

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Indole - Metabolon
Indole, or 2,3-Benzopyrrole, is an aromatic compound made of a benzene ring and a pyrrole ring with eight carbon atoms and one nitrogen atom . Bacteria and plants produce indole from tryptophan and use it for signaling and defending against intruders. www.metabolon.com
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Indole - Wikipedia
Indoles are derivatives of indole where one or more of the hydrogen atoms have been replaced by substituent groups. Indoles are widely distributed in nature, ... en.wikipedia.org
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Indole | C8H7N | CID 798 - PubChem
1H-indole is an indole and a polycyclic heteroarene. It has a role as an Escherichia coli metabolite. It is a tautomer of a 3H-indole. pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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indole
▪ I. indole, n. Chem. (ˈɪndəʊl) Also (improp.) indol. [f. indo-2 + -ole, from L. oleum oil. (Not -ol, as indole has not the structure of an alcohol.)] a. A crystallizable substance (C8H7N), called also ketole, formed in large shining colourless laminæ, having a peculiar but not very powerful odour; ... Oxford English Dictionary
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Indole - Metabolite of the month - biocrates life sciences ag
Indole is the main metabolite produced by gut bacteria during tryptophan metabolism (Jaglin et al. 2018), and is a precursor of metabolites that can be both ... biocrates.com
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Indole - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics
Indole is a planar bicyclic molecule in which the benzene ring is fused through 2 and 3 positions of N-containing pyrrole ring. www.sciencedirect.com
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Indole | Aromatic, Biosynthesis, Metabolism - Britannica
Indole, a heterocyclic organic compound occurring in some flower oils, such as jasmine and orange blossom, in coal tar, and in fecal matter. www.britannica.com
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Indole - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics
Indole is defined as a bicyclic structure consisting of a fused benzene ring and a five-membered pyrrole ring, known for its wide range of biological ... www.sciencedirect.com
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INDOLE Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of INDOLE is a crystalline alkaloid compound C8H7N that is a decomposition product of proteins containing tryptophan, ... www.merriam-webster.com
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Showing metabocard for Indole (HMDB0000738)
Indole is a microbial metabolite and it can be produced by bacteria as a degradation product of the amino acid tryptophan. It occurs naturally in human feces ... hmdb.ca
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Indole test
The indole test is a biochemical test performed on bacterial species to determine the ability of the organism to convert tryptophan into indole. This is due to the presence of skatole, also known as methyl indole or methylated indole, another possible product of tryptophan degradation. wikipedia.org
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Indole alkaloid
Indole alkaloids are a class of alkaloids containing a structural moiety of indole; many indole alkaloids also include isoprene groups and are thus called Some 200 dimeric indole alkaloids are known with two indole groups. wikipedia.org
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Indole-2-monooxygenase
Indole-2-monooxygenase (, BX2 (gene), CYP71C4 (gene)) is an enzyme with systematic name indole,NAD(P)H:oxygen oxidoreductase (2-hydroxylating). This enzyme catalyses the following chemical reaction indole + NAD(P)H + H+ + O2 indolin-2-one + NAD(P)+ + H2O Indole-2-monooxygenase is involved in wikipedia.org
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Fukuyama indole synthesis
synthesis to create a disubstituted indole. References Indole forming reactions Free radical reactions Name reactions wikipedia.org
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Nenitzescu indole synthesis
There are also a variety of other reactions that result in the same indole skeleton. References Indole forming reactions Carbon-heteroatom bond forming reactions Name reactions wikipedia.org
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