Phosphodiester: Difference between revisions

From The School of Biomedical Sciences Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m Created page with " DNA and RNA nucleotides are made up of a ribose sugar group, a nitrogenous base (either cytosine, guanine, adenine, thymine or uracil) and a phosphate group. The backbone o..."
 
Added in some more links
 
(2 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
&nbsp;DNA and RNA nucleotides are made up of a ribose sugar group, a nitrogenous base (either cytosine, guanine, adenine, thymine or uracil) and a phosphate group. The backbone of DNA and RNA strands are formed when many nucleotides are stacked on top of each other. Phosphodiester bonds form between the 3' hydroxyl group of the sugar of one nucleotide and the 5' phosphate group another allowing the construction of large chains which hold vast amounts of genetic information.&nbsp;<ref name="Hartl, D et al, 2012">Hartl, D et al (2012). Genetics. USA: Cathleen Sether. 43.</ref>&nbsp;
[[DNA|DNA]] and [[RNA|RNA]] [[Nucleotides|nucleotides]] are made up of a [[Ribose|ribose]] sugar group, a [[Nitrogenous_base|nitrogenous base]] (either [[Cytosine|cytosine]], [[Guanine|guanine]], [[Adenine|adenine]], [[Thymine|thymine]] or [[Uracil|uracil]]) and a [[Phosphate group|phosphate group]]. The backbone of [[DNA|DNA]] and RNA strands are formed when many nucleotides are stacked on top of each other. [[Phosphodiester_bond|Phosphodiester bonds]] form between the 3' [[Hydroxyl group|hydroxyl group]] of the sugar of one [[Nucleotide|nucleotide ]]and the 5' [[Phosphate_group|phosphate group]] another allowing the construction of large chains which hold vast amounts of genetic information&nbsp;<ref name="Hartl, D et al, 2012">Hartl, D et al (2012). Genetics. USA: Cathleen Sether. 43.</ref><ref>Hartl, D et al (2012). Genetics. USA: Cathleen Sether. 43</ref>.<br>


=== References  ===


 
<references />
References
 
Hartl, D et al (2012). Genetics. USA: Cathleen Sether. 43

Latest revision as of 22:43, 4 December 2016

DNA and RNA nucleotides are made up of a ribose sugar group, a nitrogenous base (either cytosine, guanine, adenine, thymine or uracil) and a phosphate group. The backbone of DNA and RNA strands are formed when many nucleotides are stacked on top of each other. Phosphodiester bonds form between the 3' hydroxyl group of the sugar of one nucleotide and the 5' phosphate group another allowing the construction of large chains which hold vast amounts of genetic information [1][2].

References

  1. Hartl, D et al (2012). Genetics. USA: Cathleen Sether. 43.
  2. Hartl, D et al (2012). Genetics. USA: Cathleen Sether. 43