Molybdenum (BioCAD00000014187)

blood cerebrospinal fluid (csf) saliva urine brain

Metabolite Card

Formula: Mo (97.9054)
SMILES: [Mo++]

Synonyms [en]

Molybdenum; MOLYBDENUM ATOM; Mo; molibdeno; Molybdenum(6+); Molybdenum ion(6+)

Reviewed

Last reviewed on 2024-06-28.

Cite this Page

Molybdenum. 数据之源,洞见之始. SMRUCC genomics institute, a synthetic life researcher from China. https://biocad_registry.innovation.ac.cn/s/(-)-arctiin (retrieved 2026-01-03) (CAD Registry RN: BioCAD00000014187). Licensed under the Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0).

Note

Molybdenum is a transition metal with the atomic symbol Mo, atomic number 42, and atomic weight 95.94. The pure metal is silvery white in color, fairly soft, and has one of the highest melting points of all pure elements. Physiologically, it exists as an ion in the body. It is an essential trace element, being a component of the enzymes xanthine oxidase, aldehyde oxidase, and nitrate reductase. There is a trace requirement for molybdenum in plants, and soils can be barren due to molybdenum deficiencies. Plants and animals generally have molybdenum present in amounts of a few parts per million. In animals molybdenum is a cofactor of the enzyme xanthine oxidase which is involved in the pathways of purine degradation and formation of uric acid. In some animals, adding a small amount of dietary molybdenum enhances growth. Francis Crick suggested that since molybdenum is an essential trace element that plays an important role in many enzymatic reactions, despite being less abundant than the more common elements, such as chromium and nickel, that perhaps this fact is indicative of "Panspermia." Crick theorized that if it could be shown that the elements represented in terrestrial living organisms correlate closely with those that are abundant in some class of star - molybdenum stars, for example, that this would provide evidence of such Directed Panspermia. In small quantities, molybdenum is effective at hardening steel. Molybdenum is important in plant nutrition, and is found in certain enzymes, including xanthine oxidase. Molybdenum is used to this day in high-strength alloys and in high-temperature steels. Special molybdenum-containing alloys, such as the Hastelloys, are notably heat-resistant and corrosion-resistant. Molybdenum is used in oil pipelines, aircraft and missile parts, and in filaments. Molybdenum finds use as a catalyst in the petroleum industry, especially in catalysts for removing organic sulfurs from petroleum products. It is used to form the anode in some x-ray tubes, particularly in mammography applications. And is found in some electronic applications as the conductive metal layers in thin-film transistors (TFTs). Molybdenum disulfide is a good lubricant, especially at high temperatures. And Mo-99 is used in the nuclear isotope industry. Molybdenum pigments range from red-yellow to a bright red orange and are used in paints, inks, plastics, and rubber compounds.

Entity Information

DBLinks

Other DBLinks
  • CAS Registry Number: 14392-20-2
  • CAS Registry Number: 16065-87-5
  • CAS Registry Number: 16727-12-1
  • CAS Registry Number: 22541-84-0
  • CAS Registry Number: 7439-98-7
  • PubChem: 185498
  • PubChem: 23932
  • PubChem: 25087173
  • ChEBI: ChEBI:176570
  • ChEBI: ChEBI:28685
  • HMDB: HMDB0001302
  • KEGG: C00150
  • NCBI MeSH: Molybdenum
  • Wikipedia: Molybdenum
  • DrugBank: DB11137
  • Coconut NaturalProduct: CNP0569557.0

Class / Ontology

Metabolic Network
ID EC Number Name
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Organism Source

Taxonomy Source

Pathway Synthetic

pathway id name
BioCyc:HUMAN_PWY-5326 sulfite oxidation
BioCyc:HUMAN_PWY-5328 superpathway of methionine degradation
BioCyc:HUMAN_PWY-7927 sulfide oxidation IV (metazoa)
BioCyc:META_PWY-5044 purine nucleotides degradation I (plants)
BioCyc:META_PWY-5695 inosine 5'-phosphate degradation
BioCyc:META_PWY-5062 superpathway of nicotinate degradation
BioCyc:META_PWY-6607 guanosine nucleotides degradation I
BioCyc:META_PWY-5335 superpathway of sulfide oxidation (Starkeya novella)
BioCyc:HPY_PWY0-1415 superpathway of heme biosynthesis from uroporphyrinogen-III
BioCyc:CORYNE_PWY-7616 methanol oxidation to carbon dioxide
BioCyc:META_PWY-6596 adenosine nucleotides degradation I
BioCyc:META_PWY-5033 nicotinate degradation II
BioCyc:META_P165-PWY superpathway of purines degradation in plants
BioCyc:HPY_TRPSYN-PWY L-tryptophan biosynthesis
BioCyc:META_TRPIAACAT-PWY indole-3-acetate biosynthesis VI (bacteria)
BioCyc:META_URSIN-PWY ureide biosynthesis
BioCyc:HPY_HEMESYN2-PWY heme biosynthesis from uroporphyrinogen-III II
BioCyc:META_PWY-1341 phenylacetate degradation II (anaerobic)
BioCyc:META_PWY-5276 sulfite oxidation I
BioCyc:META_PWY-721 3-methylquinoline degradation
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