tetraantennary
Tetraantennary is an adjective used in chemistry and biochemistry to describe a molecule that bears four antenna-like substituents or branches extending from a common core. The term is often used in glycoscience to describe a class of highly branched N-linked glycans, as well as in polymer and dendrimer chemistry to denote four-armed architectures.
In the context of N-glycans, tetraantennary refers to complex-type glycans that display four terminal antennae, typically
Structurally, tetraantennary N-glycans commonly feature terminal sialylation or fucosylation, and they exhibit substantial microheterogeneity due to
Outside glycoscience, tetraantennary describes four-armed architectures used in dendrimer- or polymer-based constructs, where four identical or