What do the dots mean in HN.CO.CH3 connected to the second carbon of N- Acetylglucosamine? And what do the N...
What do the dots mean in HN.CO.CH3 connected to the second carbon of N- Acetylglucosamine? And what do the N and acetyl indicate?
organic-chemistry biochemistry
New contributor
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What do the dots mean in HN.CO.CH3 connected to the second carbon of N- Acetylglucosamine? And what do the N and acetyl indicate?
organic-chemistry biochemistry
New contributor
1
What is glucosamine? What is an acetyl? The acetyl is connected to the amine at the nitrogen atom, hence N-acetyl. These "dots" (they look more like blobs to me) are just a simple covalent bond. Why they look like blobs I have no idea.
– Karl
2 days ago
3
These don't look like dots to me, more like en-dashes used for denoting chemical bonds (e.g. $ce{HN-CO-CH3}$). Probably they were chosen short by the typography in order to fit an entire structure on the page. N- indicate the substituent on the nitrogen, and the task of finding what is acetyl is I leave to you:)
– andselisk
2 days ago
3
They look more like dashs to me, a dash is a common symbol for a single bond
– Nuclear Chemist
2 days ago
add a comment |
What do the dots mean in HN.CO.CH3 connected to the second carbon of N- Acetylglucosamine? And what do the N and acetyl indicate?
organic-chemistry biochemistry
New contributor
What do the dots mean in HN.CO.CH3 connected to the second carbon of N- Acetylglucosamine? And what do the N and acetyl indicate?
organic-chemistry biochemistry
organic-chemistry biochemistry
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked 2 days ago
Anas Al-ameenAnas Al-ameen
91
91
New contributor
New contributor
1
What is glucosamine? What is an acetyl? The acetyl is connected to the amine at the nitrogen atom, hence N-acetyl. These "dots" (they look more like blobs to me) are just a simple covalent bond. Why they look like blobs I have no idea.
– Karl
2 days ago
3
These don't look like dots to me, more like en-dashes used for denoting chemical bonds (e.g. $ce{HN-CO-CH3}$). Probably they were chosen short by the typography in order to fit an entire structure on the page. N- indicate the substituent on the nitrogen, and the task of finding what is acetyl is I leave to you:)
– andselisk
2 days ago
3
They look more like dashs to me, a dash is a common symbol for a single bond
– Nuclear Chemist
2 days ago
add a comment |
1
What is glucosamine? What is an acetyl? The acetyl is connected to the amine at the nitrogen atom, hence N-acetyl. These "dots" (they look more like blobs to me) are just a simple covalent bond. Why they look like blobs I have no idea.
– Karl
2 days ago
3
These don't look like dots to me, more like en-dashes used for denoting chemical bonds (e.g. $ce{HN-CO-CH3}$). Probably they were chosen short by the typography in order to fit an entire structure on the page. N- indicate the substituent on the nitrogen, and the task of finding what is acetyl is I leave to you:)
– andselisk
2 days ago
3
They look more like dashs to me, a dash is a common symbol for a single bond
– Nuclear Chemist
2 days ago
1
1
What is glucosamine? What is an acetyl? The acetyl is connected to the amine at the nitrogen atom, hence N-acetyl. These "dots" (they look more like blobs to me) are just a simple covalent bond. Why they look like blobs I have no idea.
– Karl
2 days ago
What is glucosamine? What is an acetyl? The acetyl is connected to the amine at the nitrogen atom, hence N-acetyl. These "dots" (they look more like blobs to me) are just a simple covalent bond. Why they look like blobs I have no idea.
– Karl
2 days ago
3
3
These don't look like dots to me, more like en-dashes used for denoting chemical bonds (e.g. $ce{HN-CO-CH3}$). Probably they were chosen short by the typography in order to fit an entire structure on the page. N- indicate the substituent on the nitrogen, and the task of finding what is acetyl is I leave to you:)
– andselisk
2 days ago
These don't look like dots to me, more like en-dashes used for denoting chemical bonds (e.g. $ce{HN-CO-CH3}$). Probably they were chosen short by the typography in order to fit an entire structure on the page. N- indicate the substituent on the nitrogen, and the task of finding what is acetyl is I leave to you:)
– andselisk
2 days ago
3
3
They look more like dashs to me, a dash is a common symbol for a single bond
– Nuclear Chemist
2 days ago
They look more like dashs to me, a dash is a common symbol for a single bond
– Nuclear Chemist
2 days ago
add a comment |
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These are not dots. They actually are single bonds though I do not know why they are printed that way. As such, they should be represented by a half-long dash (called EN DASH in Unicode).
In the name N-acetylglucosamine, acetyl means that a hydrogen atom has been replaced an acetyl group (i.e. –CO–CH3) and that the replacement occurred on the nitrogen (aka "N") atom.
Overall, it means something like: "consider glucosamine but replace one hydrogen on the nitrogen atom by an acetyl group". This is the standard "substitutive naming" defined by the IUPAC.
add a comment |
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These are not dots. They actually are single bonds though I do not know why they are printed that way. As such, they should be represented by a half-long dash (called EN DASH in Unicode).
In the name N-acetylglucosamine, acetyl means that a hydrogen atom has been replaced an acetyl group (i.e. –CO–CH3) and that the replacement occurred on the nitrogen (aka "N") atom.
Overall, it means something like: "consider glucosamine but replace one hydrogen on the nitrogen atom by an acetyl group". This is the standard "substitutive naming" defined by the IUPAC.
add a comment |
These are not dots. They actually are single bonds though I do not know why they are printed that way. As such, they should be represented by a half-long dash (called EN DASH in Unicode).
In the name N-acetylglucosamine, acetyl means that a hydrogen atom has been replaced an acetyl group (i.e. –CO–CH3) and that the replacement occurred on the nitrogen (aka "N") atom.
Overall, it means something like: "consider glucosamine but replace one hydrogen on the nitrogen atom by an acetyl group". This is the standard "substitutive naming" defined by the IUPAC.
add a comment |
These are not dots. They actually are single bonds though I do not know why they are printed that way. As such, they should be represented by a half-long dash (called EN DASH in Unicode).
In the name N-acetylglucosamine, acetyl means that a hydrogen atom has been replaced an acetyl group (i.e. –CO–CH3) and that the replacement occurred on the nitrogen (aka "N") atom.
Overall, it means something like: "consider glucosamine but replace one hydrogen on the nitrogen atom by an acetyl group". This is the standard "substitutive naming" defined by the IUPAC.
These are not dots. They actually are single bonds though I do not know why they are printed that way. As such, they should be represented by a half-long dash (called EN DASH in Unicode).
In the name N-acetylglucosamine, acetyl means that a hydrogen atom has been replaced an acetyl group (i.e. –CO–CH3) and that the replacement occurred on the nitrogen (aka "N") atom.
Overall, it means something like: "consider glucosamine but replace one hydrogen on the nitrogen atom by an acetyl group". This is the standard "substitutive naming" defined by the IUPAC.
answered 2 days ago
SteffXSteffX
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What is glucosamine? What is an acetyl? The acetyl is connected to the amine at the nitrogen atom, hence N-acetyl. These "dots" (they look more like blobs to me) are just a simple covalent bond. Why they look like blobs I have no idea.
– Karl
2 days ago
3
These don't look like dots to me, more like en-dashes used for denoting chemical bonds (e.g. $ce{HN-CO-CH3}$). Probably they were chosen short by the typography in order to fit an entire structure on the page. N- indicate the substituent on the nitrogen, and the task of finding what is acetyl is I leave to you:)
– andselisk
2 days ago
3
They look more like dashs to me, a dash is a common symbol for a single bond
– Nuclear Chemist
2 days ago