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Difference between revisions of "Glycerophosphate"

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Alternatives:
Alternatives:
* racemic disodium salt hexahydrate: CAS#:  3325-00-6, "identical" (not considering purity) to the discontinued  Sigma product mentioned above, but actual availability would have to be  checked with each individual supplier 
** CHEMOS: 151924
** BOC Sciences: 3325-00-6 (sic!, they use CAS numbers as their product numbers, which actually makes a lot of sense) 
** Advance Scientific & Chemical:G2218
* racemic magnesium salt: AppliChem: A4558,1000 
* enantiopure lithium salt: Sigma: 94124
* enantiopure lithium salt: Sigma: 94124
* enatiopure bis(cyclohexylammonium) salt: Sigma: G7886  
* enatiopure bis(cyclohexylammonium) salt: Sigma: G7886  


If a racemic mixture (like Sigma G-2138) is replaced by the biologically active enantiomer the amount of substance (measured in moles) usually has to be halved. However, also consider that stated purities may also be different, requiring further adjustments.
If a racemic mixture (like Sigma G-2138) is replaced by the biologically active enantiomer the amount of substance (measured in moles) usually has to be halved. However, also consider that stated purities may also be different, requiring further adjustments.

Revision as of 11:43, 23 January 2014


high-resolution terminology - matching measurements at high-resolution


Glycerophosphate

Description

Glycerophosphate (synonym: α-glycerophosphate; glycerol-3-phosphate; C3H9O6P) is an organophosphate and it is a component of glycerophospholipids.

Abbreviation: Gp



MitoPedia topics: Substrate and metabolite 

Glycerophosphate feeds electrons directly to ubiquinone and glycerophosphate dehydrogenase oxidizes glycerophosphate to dihydroxyacetone phosphate. See also glycerol phosphate shuttle.


Nomenclature issues

Due to an ambiguity in the D, L nomenclature based on the Fisher projection the biologically active enantiomer can be labeled either D-glycerol 1-phosphate or L-glycerol 3-phosphate. Alternatives aresn-glycerol 3-phosphate or DL-alpha-glycerophosphate. Following the Cahn–Ingold–Prelog priority rules the biologically active substance is always the (R) enantiomer, independent of whether the substance is called glycerol 1-phosphate or glycerol 3-phosphate.

Availability

Sigma does not sell DL-alpha-glycerophosphate disodium salt hexahydrate (FW = 324.1; Sigma G-2138) any more (personal communication with Dr. Zdenek Drahota, Dept. of Bioenergetics, Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Rep.)! [In Dr. Drahota's lab a 1 M stock solution is used and the final concentration in the O2k-chamber is 10 mM.]

Search for an adequate replacement is underway.

Alternatives:

  • racemic disodium salt hexahydrate: CAS#: 3325-00-6, "identical" (not considering purity) to the discontinued Sigma product mentioned above, but actual availability would have to be checked with each individual supplier
    • CHEMOS: 151924
    • BOC Sciences: 3325-00-6 (sic!, they use CAS numbers as their product numbers, which actually makes a lot of sense)
    • Advance Scientific & Chemical:G2218
  • racemic magnesium salt: AppliChem: A4558,1000
  • enantiopure lithium salt: Sigma: 94124
  • enatiopure bis(cyclohexylammonium) salt: Sigma: G7886

If a racemic mixture (like Sigma G-2138) is replaced by the biologically active enantiomer the amount of substance (measured in moles) usually has to be halved. However, also consider that stated purities may also be different, requiring further adjustments.