Category
page 1Ten-membered rings
cyclodecane
Cyclodecane is a cycloalkane with the chemical formula C10H20.

calicheamicin
The calicheamicins are a class of enediyne antitumor antibiotics derived from the bacterium Micromonospora echinospora, with calicheamicin γ1 being the most notable. It was isolated originally in the mid-1980s from the chalky soil, or "caliche pits", located in Kerrville, Texas. The sample was collected by a scientist working for Lederle Labs. It is extremely toxic to all cells and, in 2000, a CD33 antigen-targeted immunoconjugate N-acetyl dimethyl hydrazide calicheamicin was developed and marketed as targeted therapy against the non-solid tumor cancer acute myeloid leukemia (AML). A second ca
esperamicin
The esperamicins are chromoprotein enediyne antitumor antibiotics of bacterial origin. Esperamicin A1 is the most well studied compound in this class. Esperamcin A1 and the related enediyne calicheamicin are the two most potent antitumor agents known. The esperamicins are extremely toxic DNA splicing compounds.
dynemicin A
chemical compound
cyclodecene
Cyclodecene is a cycloalkene with a ten-membered ring, with two possible geometric isomers, denoted cis-cyclodecene and trans-cyclodecene, or (Z)-cyclodecene and (E)-cyclodecene.