BackNucleic Acids: Structure and Components
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Concept: Nucleic Acids
Components of Nucleic Acids
Nucleic acids are essential biomolecules that store and transmit genetic information in living organisms. They are composed of three fundamental components:
Pentose Sugar: A five-carbon sugar, either ribose (in RNA) or deoxyribose (in DNA).
Phosphate Group: One or more phosphate groups attached to the sugar.
Nitrogenous Base: A heterocyclic base, which can be a purine (adenine, guanine) or a pyrimidine (cytosine, thymine, uracil).
Example: The structure of a nucleotide includes all three components, while a nucleoside consists only of the sugar and base.
Nucleotides and Nucleosides
Nucleic acids are polymers of nucleotides. Nucleotides are the monomeric units that make up DNA and RNA.
Nucleosides: Consist of a nitrogenous base linked to a pentose sugar. They lack phosphate groups.
Nucleotides: Consist of a nucleoside with one or more phosphate groups attached.
Nucleotide Triphosphates: (e.g., ATP, GTP) are used in nucleic acid synthesis because they provide the energy for polymerization reactions.
Example: ATP (adenosine triphosphate) is a nucleotide triphosphate that serves as an energy source in cells.
Carbon Numbering in Nucleotides
Nucleotides use a unique carbon numbering system to distinguish the atoms in the sugar from those in the base. The sugar carbons are numbered 1' to 5', while the base carbons are numbered without the prime symbol.
1' Carbon: Attached to the nitrogenous base.
5' Carbon: Attached to the phosphate group.
Example: The 3' and 5' positions are critical for forming the phosphodiester bonds in nucleic acid polymers.
Nitrogenous Bases
There are five major nitrogenous bases found in nucleic acids:
Base | Type | Found in |
|---|---|---|
Adenine | Purine | DNA & RNA |
Guanine | Purine | DNA & RNA |
Cytosine | Pyrimidine | DNA & RNA |
Thymine | Pyrimidine | DNA only |
Uracil | Pyrimidine | RNA only |
Example: Thymine is found only in DNA, while uracil is found only in RNA.
Key Equations
General structure of a nucleotide:
Phosphodiester bond formation:
Additional info: Nucleic acids are fundamental to genetic information storage and transfer. The sequence of bases encodes genetic instructions, and the structure of nucleotides allows for the formation of stable, information-rich polymers.