Adenine: Difference between revisions

From The School of Biomedical Sciences Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Nnjm2 (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
Adenine is one of the four [[Nitrogen|nitrogen]]-containing base pairs found in [[DNA|DNA]]. It is one of the purines, the other being [[Guanine|guanine]], and has a [[Molecular weight|molecular weight]] of ~135 g/mol. In [[DNA|DNA]] it provides stability to the double helix by forming two [[Hydrogen_bonds|hydrogen bonds]] with [[Thymine|thymine]], its complementary base pair. However in [[RNA|RNA]] it forms [[Hydrogen_bonds|hydrogen bonds]] with [[Uracil|uracil]] instead of [[Thymine|thymine]]. [[Purines|Purines]] are 6 membered rings attatched to a 5 membered ring with [[Nitrogens|nitrogens]] at positions 1, 3, 7 and 9 on the rings&nbsp;<ref>http://www.chem.duke.edu/~jds/cruise_chem/Exobiology/adenine.html</ref>.
Adenine is one of the four [[Nitrogen|nitrogen]]-containing base pairs found in [[DNA|DNA]].&nbsp;It is one of the purines, the other being [[Guanine|guanine]], and has a [[Molecular weight|molecular weight]] of ~135 g/mol. In [[DNA|DNA]] it provides stability to the double helix by forming two [[Hydrogen bonds|hydrogen bonds]] with [[Thymine|thymine]]&nbsp;(a [[Pyrimidine|pyrimidine]]), which is adenines&nbsp;complementary base pair. However in [[RNA|RNA]] it forms [[Hydrogen bonds|hydrogen bonds]] with [[Uracil|uracil]] instead of [[Thymine|thymine]]. [[Purines|Purines]] are 6 membered rings attatched to a 5 membered ring with [[Nitrogens|nitrogens]] at positions 1, 3, 7 and 9 on the rings.
 
Adenine plays an important role in cellular organisms in the form of [[ATP|ATP]], an energy rich molecule used during proccesses such as [[Respiration|respiration]].&nbsp;<ref>http://www.chem.duke.edu/~jds/cruise_chem/Exobiology/adenine.html</ref>.  
 
<br>
 
 


=== References  ===
=== References  ===


<references />
<references />

Revision as of 19:36, 27 November 2014

Adenine is one of the four nitrogen-containing base pairs found in DNA. It is one of the purines, the other being guanine, and has a molecular weight of ~135 g/mol. In DNA it provides stability to the double helix by forming two hydrogen bonds with thymine (a pyrimidine), which is adenines complementary base pair. However in RNA it forms hydrogen bonds with uracil instead of thymine. Purines are 6 membered rings attatched to a 5 membered ring with nitrogens at positions 1, 3, 7 and 9 on the rings.

Adenine plays an important role in cellular organisms in the form of ATP, an energy rich molecule used during proccesses such as respiration[1].



References