Carbohydrate conformation
Carbohydrate conformation refers to the overall three-dimensional structure adopted by a carbohydrate (saccharide) molecule as a result of the through-bond and through-space physical forces it experiences arising from its molecular structure. The physical forces that dictate the three-dimensional shapes of all molecules—here, of all monosaccharide, oligosaccharide, and polysaccharide molecules—are sometimes summarily captured by such terms as "steric interactions" and "stereoelectronic effects" (see below).
Wikipage disambiguates
Wikipage redirect
seeAlso
primaryTopic
Carbohydrate conformation
Carbohydrate conformation refers to the overall three-dimensional structure adopted by a carbohydrate (saccharide) molecule as a result of the through-bond and through-space physical forces it experiences arising from its molecular structure. The physical forces that dictate the three-dimensional shapes of all molecules—here, of all monosaccharide, oligosaccharide, and polysaccharide molecules—are sometimes summarily captured by such terms as "steric interactions" and "stereoelectronic effects" (see below).
has abstract
Carbohydrate conformation refe ...... processes in living organisms.
@en
Wikipage page ID
22,410,248
page length (characters) of wiki page
Wikipage revision ID
1,011,999,927
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
wikiPageUsesTemplate
comment
Carbohydrate conformation refe ...... ectronic effects" (see below).
@en
label
Carbohydrate conformation
@en