- reactions.
Metal acyls arise usually via
insertion of
carbon monoxide into metal–alkyl bonds.
Metal acyls also
arise from
reactions involving acyl chlorides...
- An
acyl halide (also
known as an acid halide) is a
chemical compound derived from an
oxoacid by
replacing a
hydroxyl group (−OH) with a
halide group (−X...
-
Using this approach,
lipids may be
divided into
eight categories:
fatty acyls, glycerolipids, glycerophospholipids, sphingolipids, saccharolipids, and...
-
Acyl-CoA is a
group of CoA-based
coenzymes that
metabolize carboxylic acids.
Fatty acyl-CoA's are
susceptible to beta oxidation, forming, ultimately,...
-
example of an
acyl chloride is
acetyl chloride, CH3COCl.
Acyl chlorides are the most
important subset of
acyl halides.
Where the
acyl chloride moiety...
-
acyl azides are
generated under conditions where they
rearrange to the isocyanate.
Alkyl or aryl
acyl chlorides react with
sodium azide to give
acyl azides...
- enzymology, an
acyl-[
acyl-carrier-protein]
desaturase (EC 1.14.19.2) is an
enzyme that
catalyzes the
chemical reaction stearoyl-[
acyl-carrier-protein]...
- [(CO)3Fe(C(O)CH3)2Fe(CO)3]2-.
Metal acyls are
often generated by the
reaction of low-valent
metal centers with
acyl chlorides.
Illustrative is the oxidative...
- The
acyl carrier protein (ACP) is a
cofactor of both
fatty acid and
polyketide biosynthesis machinery. It is one of the most
abundant proteins in cells...
- enzymology, an
acyl-[
acyl-carrier-protein]-phospholipid O-acyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.40) is an
enzyme that
catalyzes the
chemical reaction acyl-[
acyl-carrier...