Like the other stereoisomers, neo-inositol is considered a carbohydrate, specifically a sugar alcohol (to distinguish it from the more familiar ketose and aldose sugars, like glucose). It occurs in nature, but only in small amounts; usually much smaller than those of myo-inositol, the most important stereoisomer.[8]
Chemical and physical properties
Crystal structure
neo-inositol crystallizes in the triclinic system with group. The cell parameters are a = 479.9 pm, b = 652.0 pm, c = 650.5 pm, α = 70.61°, β = 69.41°, γ = 73.66°, Z = 1, with molecular symmetry . The cell volume is 0.176 nm3. The ring has the chair conformation with puckering parameter Q = 60.9 pm.[4]
^Alexandra Simperler, Stephen W. Watt, P. Arnaud Bonnet, William Jones, W. D. Samuel Motherwell (2006): "Correlation of melting points of inositols with hydrogen bonding patterns". CrystEngComm, volume 8, pages 589-600 doi:10.1039/B606107A
^Watt, S. W.; Chisholm, J. A.; Jones, W.; Motherwell, S. (2004). "A Molecular Dynamics Simulation of the Melting Points and Glass Transition Temperatures of Myo- and Neo-Inositol". Journal of Chemical Physics. 121 (19): 9565–9573. doi:10.1063/1.1806792. PMID15538878.
^Michael Podeschwa, Oliver Plettenburg, Jochen vom Brocke, Oliver Block, Stephan Adelt, Hans-Josef Altenbach (2003): "Stereoselective synthesis of myo-, neo-, L-chiro, D-chiro, allo-, scyllo-, and epi-inositol systems via conduritols prepared from p-benzoquinone". European Journal of Organic Chemistry, volume 2003, issue 10, pages 1958-1972. doi:10.1002/ejoc.200200572
^Irina Monnard, Thierry Bénet, Rosemarie Jenni, Sean Austin, Irma Silva-Zolezzi, Jean-Philippe Godin (2020): "Plasma and urinary inositol isomer profiles measured by UHPLC-MS/MS reveal differences in scyllo-inositol levels between non-pregnant and pregnant women". Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry, volume 412, pages 7871–7880. doi:10.1007/s00216-020-02919-8