carboxylated
Carboxylated refers to a molecule that has been modified to bear one or more carboxyl groups (-COOH or its conjugate base -COO-). In chemistry, carboxylation is the process of introducing a carboxyl group into an organic substrate, typically by reaction with carbon dioxide (CO2) or by oxidation of a carbon center followed by carboxylation. The term can describe neutral carboxylic acids, their salts, or their esters formed after modification.
Common examples include carboxylated polymers such as carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC), where carboxymethyl groups are introduced onto
Biology features a specific form known as gamma-carboxylation, an enzymatic modification in which glutamate residues are
Chemically, carboxylated species are typically more polar and acidic than their precursors. They may exist as