1-tetradecanol

1-tetradecanol is a lipid of Fatty Acyls (FA) class.

Cross Reference

There are no associated biomedical information in the current reference collection.

Current reference collection contains 376 references associated with 1-tetradecanol in LipidPedia. Due to lack of full text of references or no associated biomedical terms are recognized in our current text-mining method, we cannot extract any biomedical terms related to diseases, pathways, locations, functions, genes, lipids, and animal models from the associated reference collection.

Users can download the reference list at the bottom of this page and read the reference manually to find out biomedical information.


Here are additional resources we collected from PubChem and MeSH for 1-tetradecanol

Possible diseases from mapped MeSH terms on references

We collected disease MeSH terms mapped to the references associated with 1-tetradecanol

MeSH term MeSH ID Detail
Dermatitis, Contact D003877 59 associated lipids
Drug Eruptions D003875 30 associated lipids
Total 2

PubChem Biomolecular Interactions and Pathways

NCBI Entrez Crosslinks

All references with 1-tetradecanol

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Authors Title Published Journal PubMed Link
Thulin E et al. Molecular determinants of S100B oligomer formation. 2011 PLoS ONE pmid:21445240
Bermudez Y et al. Nicotinic acid receptor abnormalities in human skin cancer: implications for a role in epidermal differentiation. 2011 PLoS ONE pmid:21655214
Lamers SL et al. HIV-1 nef protein structures associated with brain infection and dementia pathogenesis. 2011 PLoS ONE pmid:21347424
Truman JP et al. Endothelial membrane remodeling is obligate for anti-angiogenic radiosensitization during tumor radiosurgery. 2010 PLoS ONE pmid:20808818
Rokka A et al. Pxmp2 is a channel-forming protein in Mammalian peroxisomal membrane. 2009 PLoS ONE pmid:19352492
Jin J et al. HIV-1 matrix dependent membrane targeting is regulated by Gag mRNA trafficking. 2009 PLoS ONE pmid:19662089
Du Y et al. Myristoylation of the small envelope protein of porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus is non-essential for virus infectivity but promotes its growth. 2010 Virus Res. pmid:19951726
Jin Y et al. [Fast-disintegration oral tablets having sustained release property]. 2002 Yakugaku Zasshi pmid:12440156