BackNucleotides and Nucleic Acids: Structure, Function, and Chemistry
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Nucleotides and Nucleic Acids
Introduction
Nucleotides and nucleic acids are fundamental biomolecules that store genetic information, participate in cellular metabolism, and play key roles in biological signaling. This guide covers their structure, properties, and functions, as well as the chemistry underlying their biological activity.
11.1 Nucleotides
Roles and Structure of Nucleotides
Nucleotides serve as the building blocks of nucleic acids (DNA and RNA) and have additional roles in metabolism and signaling.
They consist of three components:
Nitrogenous base (purine or pyrimidine)
Pentose sugar (ribose in RNA, deoxyribose in DNA)
Phosphate group
Nucleoside = base + sugar; Nucleotide = base + sugar + phosphate.
Example: ATP (adenosine triphosphate) is a nucleotide with adenosine (adenine + ribose) and three phosphate groups.
Nitrogenous Bases
Purines: Adenine (A), Guanine (G)
Pyrimidines: Cytosine (C), Thymine (T, in DNA), Uracil (U, in RNA)
Bases pair via hydrogen bonds: A with T (or U), G with C
Minor bases are modified forms found in DNA/RNA (e.g., methylated cytosine)
Phosphodiester Bonds
Nucleotides are linked by phosphodiester bonds between the 5' phosphate and 3' hydroxyl groups of adjacent sugars.
This forms the backbone of DNA and RNA.
Properties of Nucleotide Bases
Bases are aromatic, planar, and absorb UV light (max ~260 nm).
They are hydrophobic and stack via van der Waals interactions, stabilizing nucleic acid structure.
Base pairing is highly specific and essential for genetic fidelity.
11.2 Nucleic Acids
Types and Functions
DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid): Stores genetic information, double-stranded helix.
RNA (ribonucleic acid): Functions in gene expression, single-stranded, various forms (mRNA, tRNA, rRNA).
DNA and RNA differ in sugar (deoxyribose vs. ribose) and base composition (T vs. U).
Double Helix Structure of DNA
DNA forms a right-handed double helix (Watson-Crick model).
Strands are antiparallel and held together by complementary base pairing (A-T, G-C).
Major and minor grooves provide binding sites for proteins.
Other Forms of DNA
A-DNA: Right-handed, more compact, found in dehydrated samples.
B-DNA: Standard form in cells.
Z-DNA: Left-handed, occurs in sequences with alternating purines and pyrimidines.
Special DNA Structures
Palindromic sequences can form hairpins or cruciforms.
Triple-helical DNA and quadruplexes occur in certain regions.
RNA Structure
RNA is usually single-stranded but can form complex secondary structures (hairpins, loops).
RNA can fold into 3D shapes and participate in catalysis (ribozymes).
11.3 Nucleic Acid Chemistry
Denaturation and Hybridization
Double-stranded DNA/RNA can be denatured (separated) by heat or chemicals.
Renaturation (annealing) occurs when complementary strands reassociate.
Hybridization allows DNA/RNA from different sources to pair if sequences are complementary.
Mutations and Chemical Modifications
Nucleotides can undergo spontaneous mutations (e.g., deamination, depurination).
UV light induces thymine dimers, leading to DNA damage.
Cells have repair mechanisms to correct mutations.
Sequencing and Synthesis
DNA sequencing (e.g., Sanger method) determines nucleotide order.
Nucleic acids can be chemically synthesized for research and biotechnology.
11.4 Other Functions of Nucleotides
Energy Carriers
Nucleotides like ATP, GTP carry chemical energy for cellular processes.
Hydrolysis of phosphate bonds releases energy ( for ATP hydrolysis ≈ -30.5 kJ/mol).
Regulatory and Signaling Molecules
Nucleotides act as cofactors (NAD+, FAD) in redox reactions.
Cyclic nucleotides (cAMP, cGMP) function as second messengers in signal transduction.
Key Tables
Comparison of DNA and RNA
Feature | DNA | RNA |
|---|---|---|
Sugar | Deoxyribose | Ribose |
Bases | A, T, G, C | A, U, G, C |
Strandedness | Double-stranded | Single-stranded (usually) |
Function | Genetic storage | Gene expression, catalysis |
Major and Minor Bases
Type | Examples | Function |
|---|---|---|
Major Bases | Adenine, Guanine, Cytosine, Thymine, Uracil | Genetic coding |
Minor Bases | 5-methylcytosine, Inosine, Pseudouridine | Regulation, stability, translation |
Key Equations
Phosphodiester bond formation:
ATP hydrolysis:
Base pairing:
Summary
Nucleotides and nucleic acids are essential for genetic information storage, transmission, and cellular function.
DNA and RNA differ in structure and function but share common chemical principles.
Understanding their chemistry is crucial for biochemistry, genetics, and molecular biology.