cephalosporin antibiotic
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cephalosporin antibiotic
Summary
cephalosporin antibiotic is a class of chemical entities with similar applications or functions[1]. It ranks in the top 10% of class_of_chemical_entities_with_similar_applications_or_functions entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,447 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- cephalosporin antibiotic's instance of is recorded as class of chemical entities with similar applications or functions[3].
- cephalosporin antibiotic's instance of is recorded as structural class of chemical entities[4].
- cephalosporin antibiotic is a type of cephem antibiotic[5].
- cephalosporin antibiotic is part of cephalosporin metabolic process[6].
- cephalosporin antibiotic is part of cephalosporin biosynthetic process[7].
- cephalosporin antibiotic's Commons category is recorded as Cephalosporin antibiotics[8].
- cephalosporin antibiotic comprises nitrogen[9].
- cephalosporin antibiotic comprises oxygen[10].
- cephalosporin antibiotic comprises carbon[11].
- cephalosporin antibiotic's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Cephalosporin antibiotics[12].
- cephalosporin antibiotic's NCI Thesaurus ID is recorded as C357[13].
- cephalosporin antibiotic's isomeric SMILES is recorded as [H][C@]12SCC([])=C(N1C(=O)[C@H]2[])C(O)=O[14].
- cephalosporin antibiotic's subject has role is recorded as antibiotic[15].
Body
Definition and Type
Recorded instance of include class of chemical entities with similar applications or functions[3] and structural class of chemical entities[4]. cephalosporin antibiotic is a type of cephem antibiotic[5].
Use and Application
Components include nitrogen[9], a chemical element[16]; oxygen[10], a chemical element[17]; and carbon[11], a chemical element[18]. Part of include cephalosporin metabolic process[6] and cephalosporin biosynthetic process[7].
Why It Matters
cephalosporin antibiotic ranks in the top 10% of class_of_chemical_entities_with_similar_applications_or_functions entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,447 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 27 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[19] It is known by 28 alternative names across languages and contexts.[20]