aflatoxins
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aflatoxins
Summary
aflatoxins is a group of chemical entities[1]. aflatoxins ranks in the top 9% of group_of_chemical_entities entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,017 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- aflatoxins's instance of is recorded as group of chemical entities[3].
- aflatoxins is a type of mycotoxins[4].
- aflatoxins is a type of polyketide[5].
- aflatoxins is a type of oxacycle[6].
- aflatoxins is part of aflatoxin biosynthetic process[7].
- aflatoxins is part of aflatoxin metabolic process[8].
- aflatoxins is part of aflatoxin catabolic process[9].
- aflatoxins's Commons category is recorded as Aflatoxins[10].
- aflatoxins's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Aflatoxins[11].
- aflatoxins's median lethal dose is recorded as {'unit': 'Q21091747', 'amount': '+2'}[12].
- aflatoxins's median lethal dose is recorded as {'unit': 'Q21091747', 'amount': '+0.6'}[13].
- aflatoxins's median lethal dose is recorded as {'unit': 'Q21091747', 'amount': '+5'}[14].
- aflatoxins's subject has role is recorded as poison[15].
- aflatoxins's SMARTS notation is recorded as O=[CR1]c1c([CR1][CR1])c2ccc3c(c2oc1=O)C1C~COC1O3[16].
Body
Definition and Type
aflatoxins's instance of is recorded as group of chemical entities[3]. Recorded subclass of include mycotoxins[4], polyketide[5], and oxacycle[6].
Use and Application
Part of include aflatoxin biosynthetic process[7], aflatoxin metabolic process[8], and aflatoxin catabolic process[9].
Why It Matters
aflatoxins ranks in the top 9% of group_of_chemical_entities entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,017 views/month).[2] aflatoxins has Wikipedia articles in 29 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[17] aflatoxins is known by 29 alternative names across languages and contexts.[18]