Oligomer
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In chemistry, an oligomer consists of a finite number of monomer units (ολιγος, or oligos, is Greek for "a few"), in contrast to a polymer which, at least in principle, consists of an unbounded number of monomers. Many oils are oligomeric, such as paraffin oil and they also find use in plasticizers. They may be made from monomers by linking them together, or by separation from the higher fractions of crude oil.
In biochemistry, the term oligomer is used for short, single stranded DNA fragments, generally used in hybridization experiments (bound to glass slides or nylon membranes). It can also refer to a protein complex made of two or more subunits. In this case, a complex made of several different protein subunits is called a hetero-oligomer. When only one type of protein subunit is used in the complex, it is called homo-oligomer.
In oligomerization a chemical process only converts monomers to a finite degree of polymerization. The actual figure is a matter of debate, often a value between 10 and 100.
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Telomerization
When a oligomer forms as a result of chain transfer the oligomer is called a telomer and the process telomerization [1]. A telomere is a region of highly repetitive DNA at the end of a linear chromosome.
See also
- Protein quaternary structure
References
External Links
de:Oligomer fr:Oligomère it:Oligomero he:אוליגומר nl:Oligomeer ja:オリゴマー pl:Oligomery

