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Riboflavin , structure

The basis of the yellow green riboflavin structure (vitamin Bj, formerly also known as vitamin G, lactoflavin, ovoflavin or uroflavin) is an isoalloxazine nucleus, to which is bound the alditol ribitol at position N-10 (5-58). Riboflavin exists in an oxidised (flavo-quinone) and a reduced form (flavohydroquinone). [Pg.376]

Lumazine, l,3-dimethyl-6-phenyl-oxidation, 3, 305 Lumazine, 6,7-dimethyl-8-ribityl-in riboflavin biosynthesis, 1, 93 Lumazine, 6,7-dimethyl-8-D-ribityl-biosynthesis, 3, 320 structure, 3, 277 Lumazine, 6,7-dimethyl-2-thio-reactions... [Pg.698]

Riboflavin, or vitamin B2, is a constituent and precursor of both riboflavin 5 -phosphate, also known as flavin mononucleotide (FMN), and flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD). The name riboflavin is a synthesis of the names for the molecule s component parts, ribitol and flavin. The structures of riboflavin. [Pg.590]

Riboflavin was first isolated from whey in 1879 by Blyth, and the structure was determined by Kuhn and coworkers in 1933. For the structure determination, this group isolated 30 mg of pure riboflavin from the whites of about 10,000 eggs. The discovery of the actions of riboflavin in biological systems arose from the work of Otto Warburg in Germany and Hugo Theorell in Sweden, both of whom identified yellow substances bound to a yeast enzyme involved in the oxidation of pyridine nucleotides. Theorell showed that riboflavin 5 -phosphate was the source of the yellow color in this old yellow enzyme. By 1938, Warburg had identified FAD, the second common form of riboflavin, as the coenzyme in D-amino acid oxidase, another yellow protein. Riboflavin deficiencies are not at all common. Humans require only about 2 mg per day, and the vitamin is prevalent in many foods. This vitamin... [Pg.592]

Vitamin B2. Figure 1 Structure of oxidized and reduced riboflavin. [Pg.1289]

Thiobacillus ferrooxidans function. 6, 651 Rhus vernicifera stellacyanin structure, 6,651 Riboflavin 5 -phosphate zinc complexes, 5,958 Ribonucleotide reductases cobalt, 6,642 iron, 6,634... [Pg.214]

Table 4. Chemical structure and spectroscopical and photophysical properties of riboflavin (RF) in aqueous phosphate buffer pH 7.4 (Valle et al, 2011). Table 4. Chemical structure and spectroscopical and photophysical properties of riboflavin (RF) in aqueous phosphate buffer pH 7.4 (Valle et al, 2011).
FIGURE 10.1 The structural formula of riboflavin and partial structures of riboflavin compounds. The latter show only those portions of the molecule that differ from riboflavin. 1 — Riboflavin (RF), 2 — flavin mononucleotide or 5 -riboflavin monophosphate (FMN or 5 -FMN), 3 — flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD). [Pg.238]

Since many essential nutrients (e.g., monosaccharides, amino acids, and vitamins) are water-soluble, they have low oil/water partition coefficients, which would suggest poor absorption from the GIT. However, to ensure adequate uptake of these materials from food, the intestine has developed specialized absorption mechanisms that depend on membrane participation and require the compound to have a specific chemical structure. Since these processes are discussed in Chapter 4, we will not dwell on them here. This carrier transport mechanism is illustrated in Fig. 9C. Absorption by a specialized carrier mechanism (from the rat intestine) has been shown to exist for several agents used in cancer chemotherapy (5-fluorouracil and 5-bromouracil) [37,38], which may be considered false nutrients in that their chemical structures are very similar to essential nutrients for which the intestine has a specialized transport mechanism. It would be instructive to examine some studies concerned with riboflavin and ascorbic acid absorption in humans, as these illustrate how one may treat urine data to explore the mechanism of absorption. If a compound is... [Pg.48]

Incorporation of a flavin electron donor and a thymine dimer acceptor into DNA double strands was achieved as depicted in Scheme 5 using a complex phosphoramidite/H-phosphonate/phosphoramidite DNA synthesis protocol. For the preparation of a flavin-base, which fits well into a DNA double strand structure, riboflavin was reacted with benzaldehyde-dimethylacetale to rigidify the ribityl-chain as a part of a 1,3-dioxane substructure [49]. The benzacetal-protected flavin was finally converted into the 5 -dimethoxytri-tyl-protected-3 -H-phosphonate ready for the incorporation into DNA using machine assisted DNA synthesis (Scheme 5a). For the cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer acceptor, a formacetal-linked thymine dimer phosphoramidite was prepared, which was found to be accessible in large quantities [50]. Both the flavin base and the formacetal-linked thymidine dimer, were finally incorporated into DNA strands like 7-12 (Scheme 5c). As depicted in... [Pg.205]

Blanc, V. Lagneaux, D. Dider, P., et al., Cloning and analysis of structural genes from streptomyces pristinaspirales encoding enzymes involved in the conversion of pristinamycin PUB to PIIA PIIA synthase and NADH riboflavin 5 phosphate oxidoreductase. 1995, 177, 5206-5214. [Pg.212]

The basic structures of the two commonly suggested bluelight photoreceptor candidates, riboflavin and carotenoid, are shown in Fig. 4. [Pg.10]

The recognition of their structure permits the determination of vitamins by the tools of analytical chemistry, but while such methods are widely used in industrial production, the minute quantities in body fluids and tissues limit the purely chemical approach to a few members of this group present in relatively high concentration, e.g., vitamin C (K5). Microchemical methods are in use for the determination of thiamine, riboflavin, and some of the fat-soluble vitamins, based on the most sensitive colorimetric and, in particular, fluorometric techniques. Vitamin D, on the other hand, is determined by animal assay. [Pg.189]

A number of nitrogen heterocyclic, aromatic compounds, riboflavin 26, folic acid 27a and biopterin 27b, isolated from natural sources, are related in structure to natural redox enzyme cofactors. The electrochemistry of these and related compounds has been studied extensively. [Pg.252]

This group includes the coenzyme forms of water-soluble vitamin B2 or riboflavin. Synthesis occurs by initial cyclohydrolase action on the guanine ring of GTP and subsequent steps lead to the synthesis of the isoalloxazine ring structure (see structures below). [Pg.283]

As aromatic compounds have been exhausted as building blocks for life science products, A-heterocyclic structures prevail nowadays. They are found in many natural products, such as chlorophyll hemoglobin and the vitamins biotin (H), folic acid, niacin (PP), pyridoxine HCl (Be), riboflavine (B2), and thiamine (Bi). In life sciences 9 of the top 10 proprietary drugs and 5 of the top 10 agrochemicals contain A-heterocycIic moieties (see Tables 11.4 and 11.7). Even modern pigments, such as diphenylpyrazolopyrazoles, quinacri-dones, and engineering plastics, such as polybenzimidazoles, polyimides, and triazine resins, exhibit an A-heterocydic structure. [Pg.24]

Riboflavin synthase catalyzes the dismutation of 8-D-ribityl-6,7-dimethyllumazine to form the flavin ring system and the general features of the mechanism of this reaction have been known for some time. Recent X-ray structural studies of the enzyme from archaeal organisms such as methanobacteria have shown that the chemical mechanism of action is similar to that of enzymes from eubacteria and eukaryotes although the structures of the enzymes differ greatly <2006JBC1224>. [Pg.961]


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