tetrodotoxin
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tetrodotoxin
Summary
tetrodotoxin is a group of stereoisomers[1]. tetrodotoxin ranks in the top 2% of group_of_stereoisomers entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (3,236 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- tetrodotoxin's instance of is recorded as group of stereoisomers[3].
- tetrodotoxin is made of Tetraodontidae[4].
- tetrodotoxin is made of Diodon nichthemerus[5].
- tetrodotoxin is made of Tetraodontiformes[6].
- tetrodotoxin is made of Toadfish[7].
- tetrodotoxin's canonical SMILES is recorded as C(C1(C2C3C(N=C(NC34C(C1OC(C4O)(O2)O)O)N)O)O)O[8].
- tetrodotoxin's chemical formula is recorded as C₁₁H₁₇N₃O₈[9].
- tetrodotoxin is a type of quinazoline alkaloid[10].
- tetrodotoxin's Commons category is recorded as Tetrodotoxin[11].
- tetrodotoxin's found in taxon is recorded as Astropecten[12].
- tetrodotoxin's found in taxon is recorded as Atelopus[13].
- tetrodotoxin's found in taxon is recorded as Atergatis[14].
- tetrodotoxin's found in taxon is recorded as Charonia[15].
- tetrodotoxin's found in taxon is recorded as Gobius[16].
- tetrodotoxin's found in taxon is recorded as Southern blue-ringed octopus[17].
- tetrodotoxin's found in taxon is recorded as Planocera[18].
- tetrodotoxin's found in taxon is recorded as Taricha torosa[19].
- tetrodotoxin's found in taxon is recorded as Zosimus[20].
- tetrodotoxin's has effect is recorded as tetrodotoxin poisoning[21].
- tetrodotoxin's natural product of taxon is recorded as Tetraodontidae[22].
- tetrodotoxin's isomeric SMILES is recorded as C([C@@]1([C@@H]2[C@@H]3C@HO)O)OC@HO)O)O">[23].
- tetrodotoxin's mass is recorded as {'unit': 'Q483261', 'amount': '+319.101565'}[24].
- tetrodotoxin's melting point is recorded as {'unit': 'Q25267', 'amount': '+225'}[25].
- tetrodotoxin's subject has role is recorded as local anesthetic[26].
- tetrodotoxin's subject has role is recorded as poison[27].
Why It Matters
tetrodotoxin ranks in the top 2% of group_of_stereoisomers entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (3,236 views/month).[2] tetrodotoxin has Wikipedia articles in 26 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] tetrodotoxin is known by 27 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]