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- Q3493529 subject Q6939878.
- Q3493529 subject Q7028556.
- Q3493529 subject Q7145092.
- Q3493529 subject Q7285344.
- Q3493529 subject Q8300822.
- Q3493529 subject Q8660459.
- Q3493529 subject Q8773830.
- Q3493529 abstract "Spinosad is an insecticide based on chemical compounds found in the bacterial species Saccharopolyspora spinosa. The genus Saccharopolyspora was discovered in 1985 in isolates from crushed sugarcane which produce yellowish-pink aerial hyphae, with bead-like chains of spores enclosed in a characteristic hairy sheath. This genus is defined as aerobic, Gram-positive, nonacid-fast actinomycetes with fragmenting substrate mycelium. S. spinosa was isolated from soil collected inside a nonoperational sugar mill rum still in the Virgin Islands. Spinosad is a mixture of chemical compounds in the spinosyn family that has a generalized structure consisting of a unique tetracyclic ring system attached to an amino sugar (D-forosamine) and a neutral sugar (tri-Ο-methyl-L-rhamnose). Spinosad is relatively nonpolar and not easily dissolved in water.Spinosad is a novel mode-of-action insecticide derived from a family of natural products obtained by fermentation of S. spinosa. Spinosyns occur in over 20 natural forms, and over 200 synthetic forms (spinosoids) have been produced in the lab. Spinosad contains a mix of two spinosoids, spinosyn A, the major component, and spinosyn D (the minor component), in a roughly 17:3 ratio.".
- Q3493529 thumbnail Spinosyn_A.png?width=300.
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- Q3493529 wikiPageWikiLink Q6939878.
- Q3493529 wikiPageWikiLink Q7028556.
- Q3493529 wikiPageWikiLink Q7145092.
- Q3493529 wikiPageWikiLink Q7285344.
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- Q3493529 wikiPageWikiLink Q8660459.
- Q3493529 wikiPageWikiLink Q8773830.
- Q3493529 wikiPageWikiLink Q901227.
- Q3493529 name "Spinosyns".
- Q3493529 type ChemicalCompound.
- Q3493529 type ChemicalSubstance.
- Q3493529 type ChemicalObject.
- Q3493529 type Thing.
- Q3493529 type Q11173.
- Q3493529 comment "Spinosad is an insecticide based on chemical compounds found in the bacterial species Saccharopolyspora spinosa. The genus Saccharopolyspora was discovered in 1985 in isolates from crushed sugarcane which produce yellowish-pink aerial hyphae, with bead-like chains of spores enclosed in a characteristic hairy sheath. This genus is defined as aerobic, Gram-positive, nonacid-fast actinomycetes with fragmenting substrate mycelium. S.".
- Q3493529 label "Spinosad".
- Q3493529 depiction Spinosyn_A.png.
- Q3493529 name "Spinosyns".