adenosine
See also: adénosine
English
Etymology
From German Adenosin, corresponding to aden(ine) + (rib)os(e) + -ine.
Noun
adenosine (plural adenosines)
- (biochemistry, genetics, organic chemistry) A nucleoside derived from adenine and ribose, found in striated muscle tissue. [from 20th c.]
- 2001, Leslie Iversen, Drugs: A Very Short Introduction, Oxford, p. 82:
- Caffeine acts as an antagonist at receptors in the brain for one of the chemical messengers called adenosine.
- 2017, Matthew Walker, Why We Sleep, Penguin 2018, p. 27:
- Think of adenosine as a chemical barometer that continuously registers the amount of elapsed time since you woke up this morning.
- 2001, Leslie Iversen, Drugs: A Very Short Introduction, Oxford, p. 82:
Derived terms
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