quinine
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quinine
Summary
quinine is a type of chemical entity[1]. quinine ranks in the top 0.6% of type_of_chemical_entity entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (5,171 views/month, #75 of 12,596).[2]
Key Facts
- quinine's instance of is recorded as type of chemical entity[3].
- quinine's physically interacts with is recorded as Potassium voltage-gated channel subfamily B member 2[4].
- quinine's physically interacts with is recorded as Solute carrier family 29 member 4[5].
- quinine's physically interacts with is recorded as taste receptor type 2[6].
- quinine's canonical SMILES is recorded as COC1=CC2=C(C=CN=C2C=C1)C(C3CC4CCN3CC4C=C)O[7].
- quinine's chemical formula is recorded as C₂₀H₂₄N₂O₂[8].
- quinine is a type of Cinchonan-9-ol, 6'-methoxy-, (8alpha,9R)-[9].
- quinine is a type of quinidine[10].
- quinine is a type of epiquinine[11].
- quinine is used for medication[12].
- quinine's Commons category is recorded as Quinine[13].
- quinine comprises nitrogen[14].
- quinine comprises carbon[15].
- quinine comprises oxygen[16].
- quinine comprises hydrogen[17].
- quinine's found in taxon is recorded as Cinchona pubescens[18].
- quinine's found in taxon is recorded as Cinchona officinalis[19].
- quinine's found in taxon is recorded as Cinchona robusta[20].
- quinine's found in taxon is recorded as Festuca pratensis[21].
- quinine's found in taxon is recorded as Diaporthe[22].
- quinine's found in taxon is recorded as Cinchona[23].
- quinine's found in taxon is recorded as Festuca ovina[24].
- quinine's found in taxon is recorded as Cinchona calisaya[25].
- quinine's found in taxon is recorded as Ciliosemina pedunculata[26].
- quinine's significant drug interaction is recorded as voriconazole[27].
Why It Matters
quinine ranks in the top 0.6% of type_of_chemical_entity entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (5,171 views/month, #75 of 12,596).[2] quinine has Wikipedia articles in 30 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] quinine is known by 33 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]