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Electrophilic aromatic substitution reaction biological example

There is, for example, no end-of-text chapter entitled Heterocyclic Compounds. Rather, heteroatoms are defined in Chapter 1 and nonaromatic heterocyclic compounds introduced in Chapter 3 heterocyclic aromatic compounds are included in Chapter 11, and their electrophilic and nucleophilic aromatic substitution reactions described in Chapters 12 and 23, respectively. Heterocyclic compounds appear in numerous ways throughout the text and the biological role of two classes of them—the purines and pyrimidines—features prominently in the discussion of nucleic acids in Chapter 27. [Pg.1266]

An example of a biological electrophilic aromatic substitution occurs during the biosynthesis of phylloquinone, or vitamin Kj, the human bloodclotting factor. Phylloquinone is formed by reaction of 1,4-dihydroxy-naphthoic acid with phytyl diphosphate. Phytyl diphosphate first dissociates to a resonance-stabilized allylic carbocation, which then substitutes onto the aromatic ring in the typical way. Several further transformations lead to phylloquinone (Figure 9.15). [Pg.335]


See other pages where Electrophilic aromatic substitution reaction biological example is mentioned: [Pg.1295]    [Pg.27]    [Pg.27]    [Pg.669]    [Pg.430]    [Pg.884]    [Pg.86]    [Pg.843]    [Pg.384]    [Pg.97]   
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Aromaticity electrophilic aromatic substitution

Aromatics electrophilic substitution

Biological Examples

Biological reaction

Biological substitution reactions

Electrophile Electrophilic aromatic substitution

Electrophile reactions Electrophilic aromatic

Electrophiles examples

Electrophilic aromatic reactions

Electrophilic substitution reaction

Examples reaction

Substitution electrophilic aromatic

Substitution electrophilic aromatic substitutions

Substitution reactions aromatic

Substitution reactions electrophile

Substitution reactions electrophilic aromatic

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