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3hydroxy3methylglutarylCoA

3-hydroxy-3-methyl is an incomplete IUPAC descriptor that indicates a hydroxyl group and a methyl substituent on carbon-3 of a parent hydrocarbon framework. Because the full parent chain or ring system is not specified, the exact compound cannot be identified from this fragment alone. In general, a carbon bearing both a hydroxyl group and a methyl substituent, together with two other carbon substituents, forms a tertiary alcohol. The physical properties—such as boiling point, solubility, and odor—depend on the complete structure, including the length of the carbon chain and any additional functional groups.

Reactivity is typical of tertiary alcohols: dehydration under acidic conditions can produce alkenes, and substitution reactions

In chemistry and biochemistry, motifs with hydroxyl and methyl substituents at a tertiary center occur in various

can
convert
the
hydroxyl
into
leaving
groups
(for
example,
to
form
alkyl
halides).
Oxidation
of
tertiary
alcohols
does
not
typically
yield
carbonyl
compounds;
instead,
strong
oxidation
can
cleave
carbon–carbon
bonds
or
lead
to
rearrangements.
Synthesis
of
3-hydroxy-3-methyl
derivatives
often
involves
electrophilic
addition
to
alkenes,
carbonyl
reductions,
or
substitution
on
preexisting
tertiary
centers.
natural
products
and
synthetic
intermediates,
including
terpenoid
and
steroid
frameworks.
If
a
specific
compound
is
intended,
providing
the
complete
IUPAC
name,
a
structural
formula,
or
a
CAS
number
would
enable
a
precise,
citable
entry.