Examples of isoprene in the following topics:
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Lipid Biosynthesis
- Biological lipids originate entirely or in part from two distinct types of biochemical subunits or "building-blocks": ketoacyl and isoprene groups.
- Using this approach, lipids may be divided into eight categories: fatty acids, glycerolipids, glycerophospholipids, sphingolipids, saccharolipids, and polyketides (derived from condensation of ketoacyl subunits); and sterol lipids and prenol lipids (derived from condensation of isoprene subunits ).
- Terpenes and isoprenoids, including the carotenoids, are made by the assembly and modification of isoprene units donated from the reactive precursors isopentenyl pyrophosphate and dimethylallyl pyrophosphate.
- One important reaction that uses these activated isoprene donors is steroid biosynthesis.
- Here, the isoprene units are joined together to make squalene and then folded up and formed into a set of rings to make lanosterol.
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Vitamins and Amino Acids
- For example, menaquinone-4 (abbreviated MK-4), has four isoprene residues in its side chain.
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Carotenoids and Phycobilins
- All carotenoids are tetraterpenoids, meaning that they are produced from 8 isoprene molecules and contain 40 carbon atoms.