Purines and Pyrimidines: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
Removed image as it was copyrighted. |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[Purines|Purines]] and [[Pyrimidines|pyrimidines]] are the two building blocks of [[Nucleic acids|nucleic acids]]. There are two types of purines: [[Adenine|Adenine]] and [[Guanine|Guanine]], and three different types of pyrimidines: [[Cytosine|cytosine]], [[Thymine|thymine]] and [[Uracil|uracil]] (which is only used in [[MRNA|mRNA]] and [[TRNA|tRNA]]). Purines always bond with pyrimidines via hydrogen bonds. The purine Adenine forms two hydrogen bonds with Thymine and the purine Guanine forms three [[Hydrogen bonds|hydrogen bonds]] with Cytosine. In mRNA and tRNA, during [[Transcription|transcription]] and [[Translation|translation]], Thymine is substituted with | [[Purines|Purines]] and [[Pyrimidines|pyrimidines]] are the two building blocks of [[Nucleic acids|nucleic acids]]. There are two types of purines: [[Adenine|Adenine]] and [[Guanine|Guanine]], and three different types of pyrimidines: [[Cytosine|cytosine]], [[Thymine|thymine]] and [[Uracil|uracil]] (which is only used in [[MRNA|mRNA]] and [[TRNA|tRNA]]). Purines always bond with pyrimidines via hydrogen bonds. The purine Adenine forms two hydrogen bonds with Thymine and the purine Guanine forms three [[Hydrogen bonds|hydrogen bonds]] with Cytosine. In mRNA and tRNA, during [[Transcription|transcription]] and [[Translation|translation]], Thymine is substituted with Uracil meaning Adenine bonds with Uracil instead. |
Revision as of 15:54, 14 November 2016
Purines and pyrimidines are the two building blocks of nucleic acids. There are two types of purines: Adenine and Guanine, and three different types of pyrimidines: cytosine, thymine and uracil (which is only used in mRNA and tRNA). Purines always bond with pyrimidines via hydrogen bonds. The purine Adenine forms two hydrogen bonds with Thymine and the purine Guanine forms three hydrogen bonds with Cytosine. In mRNA and tRNA, during transcription and translation, Thymine is substituted with Uracil meaning Adenine bonds with Uracil instead.