Dideoxyribose: Difference between revisions

From The School of Biomedical Sciences Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Created page with "Dideoxyribose is important in one of the earliest genome sequencing methods, Sanger Sequencing. It is the same as the deoxyribose used in normal DNA synthesis, however it la..."
 
Nnjm2 (talk | contribs)
Added links, cleaned up references.
 
Line 1: Line 1:
Dideoxyribose is important in one of the earliest genome sequencing methods, Sanger Sequencing. It is the same as the deoxyribose used in normal DNA synthesis, however it lacks the 3' hydroxyl group aswell as the 2' hydroxyl group.  
Dideoxyribose is important in one of&nbsp;the earliest genome sequencing methods, [[Sanger_“dideoxy”_method|Sanger Sequencing]]. It is the same as the deoxyribose used in normal [[DNA_synthesis|DNA synthesis]], however it lacks the 3' hydroxyl group aswell as the 2' hydroxyl group <ref>Hartl, D. L., and Ruvolo, M. (2012:753). "Analysis of Genes and Genomes." 8th Edition.</ref>.<br>


<br>
=== References  ===


<br>
<references /><br>
 
Hartl, D. L., and Ruvolo, M. (2012:753). "Analysis of Genes and Genomes." 8th Edition.

Latest revision as of 00:13, 23 October 2013

Dideoxyribose is important in one of the earliest genome sequencing methods, Sanger Sequencing. It is the same as the deoxyribose used in normal DNA synthesis, however it lacks the 3' hydroxyl group aswell as the 2' hydroxyl group [1].

References

  1. Hartl, D. L., and Ruvolo, M. (2012:753). "Analysis of Genes and Genomes." 8th Edition.