Preferred Label : Solid-Phase synthesis techniques;
MeSH definition : Techniques used to synthesize chemicals using molecular substrates that are bound
to a solid surface. Typically a series of reactions are conducted on the bound substrate
that results in either the covalent attachment of specific moieties or the modification
of existing function groups. These techniques offer an advantage to those involving
solution reactions in that the substrate compound does not have to be isolated and
purified between the reaction steps.;
MeSH synonym : Solid-Phase synthesis technique; synthesis technique, Solid-Phase; synthesis techniques, Solid-Phase; technique, Solid-Phase synthesis; techniques, Solid-Phase synthesis; Solid-Phase synthesis methods; method, Solid-Phase synthesis; methods, Solid-Phase synthesis; solid phase synthesis methods; Solid-Phase synthesis method; synthesis method, Solid-Phase; synthesis methods, Solid-Phase; solid phase synthesis techniques;
MeSH hyponym : Solid-Phase peptide synthesis techniques; Solid-Phase nucleotide synthesis techniques; Solid Phase Peptide Synthesis Techniques; Solid Phase Nucleotide Synthesis Techniques;
Related MeSH term : Solid-Phase nucleotide synthesis; Solid-Phase synthesis; Solid-Phase peptide synthesis; Solid Phase Synthesis; Solid-Phase Syntheses; Syntheses, Solid-Phase; Synthesis, Solid-Phase; Synthesis, Solid Phase; Peptide Syntheses, Solid-Phase; Solid Phase Peptide Synthesis; Solid-Phase Peptide Syntheses; Syntheses, Solid-Phase Peptide; Synthesis, Solid-Phase Peptide; Peptide Synthesis, Solid-Phase; Peptide Synthesis, Solid Phase; Nucleotide Syntheses, Solid-Phase; Nucleotide Synthesis, Solid-Phase; Solid Phase Nucleotide Synthesis; Solid-Phase Nucleotide Syntheses; Syntheses, Solid-Phase Nucleotide; Synthesis, Solid-Phase Nucleotide;
Wikipedia link : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solid phase peptide synthesis;
Origin ID : D060327;
UMLS CUI : C3178928;
Allowable qualifiers
Record concept(s)
Semantic type(s)
Techniques used to synthesize chemicals using molecular substrates that are bound
to a solid surface. Typically a series of reactions are conducted on the bound substrate
that results in either the covalent attachment of specific moieties or the modification
of existing function groups. These techniques offer an advantage to those involving
solution reactions in that the substrate compound does not have to be isolated and
purified between the reaction steps.