Heptose
A heptose is a monosaccharide with seven carbon atoms.
They have either an aldehyde functional group in position 1 (aldoheptoses) or a ketone functional group in position 2 (ketoheptoses).
Examples
There are few examples of seven-carbon sugars in nature, among which are:
- sedoheptulose or D-altro-heptulose (a ketose), an intermediate in the Calvin cycle and in lipid A biosynthesis
- mannoheptulose, found in avocadoes
- L-glycero-D-manno-heptose (an aldose), a late intermediate in lipid A biosynthesis.
Ketoheptoses have 4 chiral centers, whereas aldoheptoses have 5.
gollark: The main differences being that that would deal with HTTP and not Krist, and not necessarily have public code for endpoints.
gollark: Funnily enough, this shares some concepts with another thing I was vaguely thinking about today, implementing a cloudflare-workers-style serverless functions thing.
gollark: Interesting, so basically shares then.
gollark: I guess so. You could make it so that if both the owners tell it to it updates the splitting.
gollark: Sure. Although if you wanted to update the split you would have to set up an entirely new address, which is a problem.
References
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