diatoxanthin
0 sources
diatoxanthin
Summary
diatoxanthin is a type of chemical entity[1]. diatoxanthin has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- diatoxanthin's instance of is recorded as type of chemical entity[3].
- diatoxanthin's canonical SMILES is recorded as CC1=C(C(CC(C1)O)(C)C)C=CC(=CC=CC(=CC=CC=C(C)C=CC=C(C)C#CC2=C(CC(CC2(C)C)O)C)C)C[4].
- diatoxanthin's chemical formula is recorded as C₄₀H₅₄O₂[5].
- diatoxanthin is a type of carotenoid[6].
- diatoxanthin's found in taxon is recorded as Pteris cretica[7].
- diatoxanthin's found in taxon is recorded as Cladonia portentosa[8].
- diatoxanthin's found in taxon is recorded as Corbicula japonica[9].
- diatoxanthin's found in taxon is recorded as Corbicula sandai[10].
- diatoxanthin's found in taxon is recorded as Aplidium pliciferum[11].
- diatoxanthin's found in taxon is recorded as Ascidia zara[12].
- diatoxanthin's found in taxon is recorded as Asterias amurensis[13].
- diatoxanthin's found in taxon is recorded as Patiria pectinifera[14].
- diatoxanthin's found in taxon is recorded as Branchiostegus japonicus[15].
- diatoxanthin's found in taxon is recorded as Aequipecten opercularis[16].
- diatoxanthin's found in taxon is recorded as Didemnum moseleyi[17].
- diatoxanthin's found in taxon is recorded as Euglena sanguinea[18].
- diatoxanthin's found in taxon is recorded as Euglena viridis[19].
- diatoxanthin's found in taxon is recorded as Fusinus perplexus[20].
- diatoxanthin's found in taxon is recorded as Grammatophora oceanica[21].
- diatoxanthin's found in taxon is recorded as Gymnodinium catenatum[22].
- diatoxanthin's found in taxon is recorded as Gyrodinium[23].
- diatoxanthin's found in taxon is recorded as Halocynthia roretzi[24].
- diatoxanthin's found in taxon is recorded as Mytilus coruscus[25].
- diatoxanthin's found in taxon is recorded as Mytilus unguiculatus[26].
- diatoxanthin's found in taxon is recorded as Nitzschia[27].
Why It Matters
diatoxanthin has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]