Welcome to LookChem.com Sign In|Join Free

CAS

  • or

7423-96-3

Post Buying Request

7423-96-3 Suppliers

Recommended suppliersmore

  • Product
  • FOB Price
  • Min.Order
  • Supply Ability
  • Supplier
  • Contact Supplier

7423-96-3 Usage

Chemical Properties

white solid

Uses

3-Fluoro-L-tyrosine is used as pharma and intermediates.

Check Digit Verification of cas no

The CAS Registry Mumber 7423-96-3 includes 7 digits separated into 3 groups by hyphens. The first part of the number,starting from the left, has 4 digits, 7,4,2 and 3 respectively; the second part has 2 digits, 9 and 6 respectively.
Calculate Digit Verification of CAS Registry Number 7423-96:
(6*7)+(5*4)+(4*2)+(3*3)+(2*9)+(1*6)=103
103 % 10 = 3
So 7423-96-3 is a valid CAS Registry Number.

7423-96-3 Well-known Company Product Price

  • Brand
  • (Code)Product description
  • CAS number
  • Packaging
  • Price
  • Detail
  • TCI America

  • (F0201)  3-Fluoro-L-tyrosine  >98.0%(HPLC)(T)

  • 7423-96-3

  • 100mg

  • 990.00CNY

  • Detail
  • Alfa Aesar

  • (L16775)  3-Fluoro-L-tyrosine, 97%   

  • 7423-96-3

  • 50mg

  • 387.0CNY

  • Detail
  • Alfa Aesar

  • (L16775)  3-Fluoro-L-tyrosine, 97%   

  • 7423-96-3

  • 250mg

  • 1537.0CNY

  • Detail

7423-96-3SDS

SAFETY DATA SHEETS

According to Globally Harmonized System of Classification and Labelling of Chemicals (GHS) - Sixth revised edition

Version: 1.0

Creation Date: Aug 12, 2017

Revision Date: Aug 12, 2017

1.Identification

1.1 GHS Product identifier

Product name 3-Fluoro-L-tyrosine

1.2 Other means of identification

Product number -
Other names (2S)-2-amino-3-(3-fluoro-4-hydroxyphenyl)propanoic acid

1.3 Recommended use of the chemical and restrictions on use

Identified uses For industry use only.
Uses advised against no data available

1.4 Supplier's details

1.5 Emergency phone number

Emergency phone number -
Service hours Monday to Friday, 9am-5pm (Standard time zone: UTC/GMT +8 hours).

More Details:7423-96-3 SDS

7423-96-3Relevant articles and documents

Biocascade Synthesis of L-Tyrosine Derivatives by Coupling a Thermophilic Tyrosine Phenol-Lyase and L-Lactate Oxidase

Jiang, Yiqi,Ju, Shuyun,Li, Guosi,Lian, Jiazhang,Lin, Jianping,Wu, Mianbin,Xue, Hailong,Yang, Lirong

supporting information, (2020/02/25)

A one-pot biocascade of two enzymatic steps catalyzed by an l-lactate oxidase and a tyrosine phenol-lyase has been successfully developed in the present study. The reaction provides an efficient method for the synthesis of l-tyrosine derivatives, which exhibits readily available starting materials and excellent yields. In the first step, an in situ generation of pyruvate from readily available bio-based l-lactate catalyzed by a highly active l-lactate oxidase from Aerococcus viridans (AvLOX) was developed (using oxygen as oxidant and catalase as hydrogen peroxide removing reagent). Pyruvate thus produced underwent C–C coupling with phenol derivatives as acceptor substrate using specially designed thermophilic tyrosine phenol-lyase mutants from Symbiobacterium toebii (TTPL). Overall, this cascade avoids the high cost and easy decomposition of pyruvate and offered an efficient and environmentally friendly procedure for l-tyrosine derivatives synthesis.

Mechanism of the AppABLUF Photocycle Probed by Site-Specific Incorporation of Fluorotyrosine Residues: Effect of the Y21 pKa on the Forward and Reverse Ground-State Reactions

Gil, Agnieszka A.,Haigney, Allison,Laptenok, Sergey P.,Brust, Richard,Lukacs, Andras,Iuliano, James N.,Jeng, Jessica,Melief, Eduard H.,Zhao, Rui-Kun,Yoon, EunBin,Clark, Ian P.,Towrie, Michael,Greetham, Gregory M.,Ng, Annabelle,Truglio, James J.,French, Jarrod B.,Meech, Stephen R.,Tonge, Peter J.

, p. 926 - 935 (2016/02/05)

The transcriptional antirepressor AppA is a blue light using flavin (BLUF) photoreceptor that releases the transcriptional repressor PpsR upon photoexcitation. Light activation of AppA involves changes in a hydrogen-bonding network that surrounds the flavin chromophore on the nanosecond time scale, while the dark state of AppA is then recovered in a light-independent reaction with a dramatically longer half-life of 15 min. Residue Y21, a component of the hydrogen-bonding network, is known to be essential for photoactivity. Here, we directly explore the effect of the Y21 pKa on dark state recovery by replacing Y21 with fluorotyrosine analogues that increase the acidity of Y21 by 3.5 pH units. Ultrafast transient infrared measurements confirm that the structure of AppA is unperturbed by fluorotyrosine substitution, and that there is a small (3-fold) change in the photokinetics of the forward reaction over the fluorotyrosine series. However, reduction of 3.5 pH units in the pKa of Y21 increases the rate of dark state recovery by 4000-fold with a Br?nsted coefficient of ~1, indicating that the Y21 proton is completely transferred in the transition state leading from light to dark adapted AppA. A large solvent isotope effect of ~6-8 is also observed on the rate of dark state recovery. These data establish that the acidity of Y21 is a crucial factor for stabilizing the light activated form of the protein, and have been used to propose a model for dark state recovery that will ultimately prove useful for tuning the properties of BLUF photosensors for optogenetic applications.

Using unnatural amino acids to probe the energetics of oxyanion hole hydrogen bonds in the ketosteroid isomerase active site

Natarajan, Aditya,Schwans, Jason P.,Herschlag, Daniel

, p. 7643 - 7654 (2014/06/10)

Hydrogen bonds are ubiquitous in enzyme active sites, providing binding interactions and stabilizing charge rearrangements on substrate groups over the course of a reaction. But understanding the origin and magnitude of their catalytic contributions relative to hydrogen bonds made in aqueous solution remains difficult, in part because of complexities encountered in energetic interpretation of traditional site-directed mutagenesis experiments. It has been proposed for ketosteroid isomerase and other enzymes that active site hydrogen bonding groups provide energetic stabilization via "short, strong" or "low-barrier" hydrogen bonds that are formed due to matching of their pKa or proton affinity to that of the transition state. It has also been proposed that the ketosteroid isomerase and other enzyme active sites provide electrostatic environments that result in larger energetic responses (i.e., greater "sensitivity") to ground-state to transition-state charge rearrangement, relative to aqueous solution, thereby providing catalysis relative to the corresponding reaction in water. To test these models, we substituted tyrosine with fluorotyrosines (F-Tyr's) in the ketosteroid isomerase (KSI) oxyanion hole to systematically vary the proton affinity of an active site hydrogen bond donor while minimizing steric or structural effects. We found that a 40-fold increase in intrinsic F-Tyr acidity caused no significant change in activity for reactions with three different substrates. F-Tyr substitution did not change the solvent or primary kinetic isotope effect for proton abstraction, consistent with no change in mechanism arising from these substitutions. The observed shallow dependence of activity on the pKa of the substituted Tyr residues suggests that the KSI oxyanion hole does not provide catalysis by forming an energetically exceptional pKa-matched hydrogen bond. In addition, the shallow dependence provides no indication of an active site electrostatic environment that greatly enhances the energetic response to charge accumulation, consistent with prior experimental results.

Post a RFQ

Enter 15 to 2000 letters.Word count: 0 letters

Attach files(File Format: Jpeg, Jpg, Gif, Png, PDF, PPT, Zip, Rar,Word or Excel Maximum File Size: 3MB)

1

What can I do for you?
Get Best Price

Get Best Price for 7423-96-3