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1) a complex cobalt-containing compound C63H88CoN14O14P that occurs esp. in liver, is essential to normal blood formation, neural function, and growth, and is used esp. in treating pernicious and related anemias and in animal feed as a growth factor called also cyanocobalamin
2) any of several compounds similar to vitamin B12 in action but having different chemistry
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a vitamin of the B complex. The form of vitamin B12 with coenzyme activity is 5-deoxyadenosyl cobalamin, which is necessary for the synthesis of nucleic acids, the maintenance of myelin in the nervous system, and the proper functioning of folic acid, another B vitamin. The vitamin can be absorbed only in the presence of intrinsic factor, a protein secreted in the stomach. A deficiency of vitamin B12 affects nearly all the body tissues, particularly those containing rapidly dividing cells. The most serious effects of a deficiency are pernicious anaemia and degeneration of the nervous system. Vitamin B12 is manufactured only by certain microorganisms and is contained only in foods of animal origin. Good sources are liver, fish, and eggs. The daily recommended adult intake is 3-4 µg.
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cyanocobalamin (q.v.) by chemical definition, but generally any substituted cobalamin (def. 2) derivative with similar biological activity; it is a water-soluble hematopoietic vitamin occurring in meats and animal products. To be absorbed by the intestine, it must combine with intrinsic factor, and its metabolism is interconnected with that of folic acid. The vitamin is necessary for the growth and replication of all body cells and the functioning of the nervous system, being required for purine and pyrimidine (and hence DNA, protein, and nucleoprotein) synthesis, methylation reactions, hematopoiesis, and myelin synthesis; at least some of these effects are mediated through its role in folic acid metabolism. Deficiency of the vitamin causes pernicious anemia and other forms of megaloblastic anemia, and neurologic lesions. See also adenosylcobalamin, cobalamin, hydroxocobalamin, and methylcobalamin.Medical dictionary. 2011.