“…myo ‐Inositol, or cis ‐1,2,3,5‐ trans ‐4,6‐cyclohexanehexol, is the most common isomeric form in nature that also uses at least five of the others ( scyllo ‐, epi ‐, neo ‐, D‐ chiro ‐, and muco ‐inositols) 3 . It constitutes the structural core of a group of important metabolites, that is, inositol phosphates and inositol phospholipids, that are involved in numerous important biological processes including cellular signal transduction, membrane transport, protein anchoring, and cytoskeletal regulation 1–4 . Specifically, phosphatidylinositols, which constitute approximately 1% of the phospholipids in cell membranes, are selectively phosphorylated by multiple kinases at the C‐3, C‐4 and C‐5 positions to generate a number of endogenous phosphatidylinositol phosphates which are in turn converted into various inositol phosphates differing for the phosphorylation pattern of the inositol ring 3,5 …”