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Beilstein J. Org. Chem. 2024, 20, 607–620, doi:10.3762/bjoc.20.53
Graphical Abstract
Figure 1: Descriptions and depictions of a particular complex-type N-glycan structure found in human leukocyt...
Figure 2: The initial idea of describing an N-glycan just by its terminal residues. Reading the termini from ...
Figure 3: Annotation of antennae with galactose and sialic residues with consideration of linkage options. No...
Figure 4: Core substituents are listed in counter-clockwise order.
Figure 5: Terminal fucosylation depicted with standard abbreviations and with ”macro-terms”.
Figure 6: Suggested annotations of ABO and Lewis blood-group antigens using the “macro-terms” La, Lb, Lx, Ly ...
Figure 7: Multi-antennary N-glycans. In addition to regular proglycan abbreviation, intended ambiguity style ...
Figure 8: Proglycan annotation of LacNAc-repeats. A: Development of the annotation showing the acronyms both ...
Figure 9: Proglycan codes for HNK-1 structures, a brain glycan with substituted bisecting GlcNAc, a sulfated ...
Figure 10: Proglycan annotation of oligomannosidic and some hybrid-type N-glycans.
Figure 11: Plant and insect N‐glycans. Since the xylose strongly indicates plant N‐glycans, a simplified annot...
Scheme 1: Suggestions for the depiction of incompletely defined N-glycan structures.
Figure 12: Provisional outline of how O-glycans with the frequent core 2 structure could be named with the pro...