Base: Difference between revisions

From The School of Biomedical Sciences Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Created page with 'A base is an organic nitrogenous molecule which, when covalently bonded to a pentose sugar, which is in turn linked to phosphate molecules, forms a nucleotide. There are fou…'
 
No edit summary
 
(7 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
A base is an organic nitrogenous molecule which, when covalently bonded to a pentose sugar, which is in turn linked to phosphate molecules, forms a nucleotide. There are four types of bases in DNA: adenine, thymine, guanine and cytosine. Generally, purine bases such as adenine and guanine form hydrogen bonds with pyrimidine bases such as thymine and cytosine. According to Watson-Crick principles in DNA, adenine only base pairs with thymine and cytosine only base pairs with guanine. Strong hydrogen bonds form between complementary bases. These hydrogen bonds are broken during semi-conservative replication so the DNA molecule can unwind.
A base is an organic nitrogenous [[Molecule|molecule]] which, when [[Covalent bond|covalently]] bonded to a [[Pentose sugar|pentose sugar]], forms a [[Nucleotide|nucleotide]], which is in turn linked to [[Phosphate|phosphate]] [[Molecules|molecules]]. There are four types of bases in [[DNA|DNA]]: [[Adenine|adenine]], [[Thymine|thymine]], [[Guanine|guanine]] and [[Cytosine|cytosine]]. Generally, [[Purine|purine]] bases such as [[Adenine|adenine]] and [[Guanine|guanine]] form [[Hydrogen bonds|hydrogen bonds]] with  [[Pyrimidine|pyrimidine]] bases such as [[Thymine|thymine]] and [[Cytosine|cytosine]]. According to [[Watson-Crick|Watson-Crick]] principles in [[DNA|DNA]], [[Adenine|adenine]] only base pairs with [[Thymine|thymine]] and [[Cytosine|cytosine]] only base pairs with [[Guanine|guanine]]. Strong [[Hydrogen bonds|hydrogen bonds]] form between complementary bases A and T or C and G. A has 2 [[Hydrogen bonds|hydrogen bonds linked]] to T whilst G has 3 [[Hydrogen bonds|hydrogen bonds]] with C. These [[Hydrogen bonds|hydrogen bonds]] are broken during [[Semi-conservative replication|semi-conservative replication]] so the [[DNA|DNA]] [[Molecule|molecule]] can unwind. In [[RNA|RNA]], thymine is replaced with [[Uracil|uracil]], complementary base pairing with A. They both have a similar structure apart from uracil lacks the 5' methyl group.

Latest revision as of 00:58, 28 November 2014

A base is an organic nitrogenous molecule which, when covalently bonded to a pentose sugar, forms a nucleotide, which is in turn linked to phosphate molecules. There are four types of bases in DNA: adenine, thymine, guanine and cytosine. Generally, purine bases such as adenine and guanine form hydrogen bonds with  pyrimidine bases such as thymine and cytosine. According to Watson-Crick principles in DNA, adenine only base pairs with thymine and cytosine only base pairs with guanine. Strong hydrogen bonds form between complementary bases A and T or C and G. A has 2 hydrogen bonds linked to T whilst G has 3 hydrogen bonds with C. These hydrogen bonds are broken during semi-conservative replication so the DNA molecule can unwind. In RNA, thymine is replaced with uracil, complementary base pairing with A. They both have a similar structure apart from uracil lacks the 5' methyl group.