glucocorticoid
0 sources
glucocorticoid
Summary
glucocorticoid is a class of chemical entities with similar applications or functions[1]. glucocorticoid ranks in the top 9% of class_of_chemical_entities_with_similar_applications_or_functions entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,507 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- glucocorticoid's instance of is recorded as class of chemical entities with similar applications or functions[3].
- glucocorticoid is a type of corticosteroid[4].
- glucocorticoid is a type of hormone[5].
- glucocorticoid is part of glucocorticoid receptor activity[6].
- glucocorticoid is part of glucocorticoid catabolic process[7].
- glucocorticoid is part of glucocorticoid metabolic process[8].
- glucocorticoid is part of response to glucocorticoid[9].
- glucocorticoid is part of cellular response to glucocorticoid stimulus[10].
- glucocorticoid is part of glucocorticoid secretion[11].
- glucocorticoid is part of glucocorticoid biosynthetic process[12].
- glucocorticoid's Commons category is recorded as Glucocorticoids[13].
- glucocorticoid's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Glucocorticoids[14].
- glucocorticoid's NCI Thesaurus ID is recorded as C2323[15].
- glucocorticoid's produced by is recorded as zona fasciculata[16].
- glucocorticoid's produced by is recorded as zona reticularis[17].
Body
Definition and Type
glucocorticoid's instance of is recorded as class of chemical entities with similar applications or functions[3]. Recorded subclass of include corticosteroid[4] and hormone[5].
Use and Application
Part of include glucocorticoid receptor activity[6], glucocorticoid catabolic process[7], glucocorticoid metabolic process[8], response to glucocorticoid[9], cellular response to glucocorticoid stimulus[10], and glucocorticoid secretion[11].
Why It Matters
glucocorticoid ranks in the top 9% of class_of_chemical_entities_with_similar_applications_or_functions entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,507 views/month).[2] glucocorticoid has Wikipedia articles in 27 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[18] glucocorticoid is known by 29 alternative names across languages and contexts.[19]