guanine
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guanine
Summary
guanine is a type of chemical entity[1]. guanine ranks in the top 4% of type_of_chemical_entity entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (338 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- guanine's instance of is recorded as type of chemical entity[3].
- guanine's chemical structure is recorded as Guanin.svg[4].
- guanine's chemical structure is recorded as Guanine.svg[5].
- guano is named after guanine[6].
- guanine's CAS Registry Number is recorded as 73-40-5[7].
- guanine's EC number is recorded as 200-799-8[8].
- guanine's canonical SMILES is recorded as C1=NC2=C(N1)C(=O)N=C(N2)N[9].
- guanine's InChI is recorded as InChI=1S/C5H5N5O/c6-5-9-3-2(4(11)10-5)7-1-8-3/h1H,(H4,6,7,8,9,10,11)[10].
- guanine's InChIKey is recorded as UYTPUPDQBNUYGX-UHFFFAOYSA-N[11].
- guanine's Bibliothèque nationale de France ID is recorded as 12423016n[12].
- guanine's chemical formula is recorded as C₅H₅N₅O[13].
- guanine's subclass of is recorded as nucleotide base[14].
- guanine's subclass of is recorded as purine alkaloid[15].
- guanine's part of is recorded as guanine binding[16].
- guanine's part of is recorded as guanine catabolic process[17].
- guanine's part of is recorded as guanine salvage[18].
- guanine's part of is recorded as GMP catabolic process to guanine[19].
- guanine's part of is recorded as guanine metabolic process[20].
- guanine's part of is recorded as guanine biosynthetic process[21].
- guanine's part of is recorded as mitochondrial guanine nucleotide transmembrane transport[22].
- guanine's part of is recorded as ABC-type guanine transporter activity[23].
- guanine's part of is recorded as guanine transmembrane transport[24].
- guanine's part of is recorded as guanine transmembrane transporter activity[25].
- guanine's part of is recorded as guanine transport[26].
- guanine's part of is recorded as guanine import across plasma membrane[27].
Why It Matters
guanine ranks in the top 4% of type_of_chemical_entity entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (338 views/month).[2] guanine has Wikipedia articles in 30 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] guanine is known by 45 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]