Altrose is an aldohexose sugar. D-Altrose is an unnatural monosaccharide. It is soluble in water and practically insoluble in methanol. However, L-altrose has been isolated from strains of the bacterium Butyrivibrio fibrisolvens.[1]
Altrose is a C-3 epimer of mannose. The ring conformation of α-altropyranoside is flexible compared to most other aldohexopyranosides, with idose as exception. In solution different derivatives of altrose have been shown to occupy both 4C1, OS2 and 1C4-conformations.[2]
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/e4/D-Altrose_Haworth.svg/220px-D-Altrose_Haworth.svg.png)
References
- ^ US patent 4966845, Stack; Robert J., "Microbial production of L-altrose", issued 1990-10-30, assigned to Government of the United States of America, Secretary of Agriculture
- ^ Immel, Stefan; Fujita, Kahee; Lichtenthaler, Frieder W. (1999). "Solution Geometries and Lipophilicity Patterns ofα-Cycloaltrin". Chemistry - A European Journal. 5 (11): 3185–3192. doi:10.1002/(SICI)1521-3765(19991105)5:11<3185::AID-CHEM3185>3.0.CO;2-W. ISSN 0947-6539.
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