Lactol

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The lactol functional group, highlighted in blue, is present in many sugars such as ribose shown here.
The lactol functional group, highlighted in blue, is present in many sugars such as ribose shown here.

In organic chemistry, a lactol is the functional group formed by the intramolecular nucleophilic addition of a hydroxyl group to an aldehyde. A lactol is the cyclic equivalent of a hemiacetal.

A lactol is often found as an equilibrium mixture with the corresponding hydroxyaldehyde. The equilibrium can favor either direction depending on ring size and other conformational effects.


The lactol functional group is prevalent in nature as component of aldose sugars.

[edit] Chemical reactivity

Lactols can participate in a variety of chemical reactions including:[1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Lundt, Inge (2001). "Oxidation, reduction and deoxygenation of carbohydrates". Glycoscience (1): 501-531.