cerebrosides
0 sources
cerebrosides
Summary
cerebrosides is a structural class of chemical entities[1]. cerebrosides draws 13 Wikipedia views per month (structural_class_of_chemical_entities category, ranking #225 of 1,029).[2]
Key Facts
- cerebrosides's instance of is recorded as structural class of chemical entities[3].
- cerebrosides's subclass of is recorded as glycoside[4].
- cerebrosides's subclass of is recorded as lipid[5].
- cerebrosides's part of is recorded as cerebroside transfer activity[6].
- cerebrosides's MeSH descriptor ID is recorded as D002554[7].
- cerebrosides's has part is recorded as carbon[8].
- cerebrosides's has part is recorded as hydrogen[9].
- cerebrosides's has part is recorded as oxygen[10].
- cerebrosides's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/087ymh[11].
- cerebrosides's MeSH tree code is recorded as D02.065.313.250[12].
- cerebrosides's MeSH tree code is recorded as D09.400.410.420.525.200.250[13].
- cerebrosides's MeSH tree code is recorded as D10.390.470.675.200.250[14].
- cerebrosides's MeSH tree code is recorded as D10.570.877.360.612.200.250[15].
- cerebrosides's ChEBI ID is recorded as 23079[16].
- cerebrosides's Gran Enciclopèdia Catalana ID is recorded as 0090111[17].
- cerebrosides's Encyclopædia Britannica Online ID is recorded as science/cerebroside[18].
- cerebrosides's BabelNet ID is recorded as 02231191n[19].
- cerebrosides's UMLS CUI is recorded as C0007805[20].
- cerebrosides's JSTOR topic ID is recorded as cerebrosides[21].
- cerebrosides's Microsoft Academic ID is recorded as 2775872319[22].
- cerebrosides's National Library of Israel J9U ID is recorded as 987007284806005171[23].
- cerebrosides's OpenAlex ID is recorded as C2775872319[24].
- cerebrosides's Gran Enciclopèdia Catalana ID is recorded as cerebrosid[25].
Why It Matters
cerebrosides draws 13 Wikipedia views per month (structural_class_of_chemical_entities category, ranking #225 of 1,029).[2] cerebrosides has Wikipedia articles in 18 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[26] cerebrosides is known by 21 alternative names across languages and contexts.[27]