DNA
DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) is the genetic information found in the nuclei of most organisms. It is arranged into structures called chromosomes. The structure of DNA was identified as being a 'double-helix' by Watson and Crick in 1953.
DNA is composed of 4 bases; the purines: Adenine (A) and Thymine (T) and the pyrimidines: Guanine (G) and Cytosine (C). These form complementary bases pairs of AT and GC. DNA also contains a phosphate group connected to a deoxyribose sugar.
Structure of DNA
DNA strands are primarily composed of three repeating units:
2-Deoxyribose sugar - A five carbon sugar (pentose) similar to that of Ribose sugar found in RNA. Its chemical formula is C5H10O4
- Phosphate group - Contains one phosphorus atom, bonded to 4 oxygens. Forms a phosphodiester bond, which connects 2 deoxyribose sugars together resulting in the formation of a chain
- A base - One from Adenine, Cytosine, Guanine or Thymine. This forms a side chain branching from the 2-deoxyribose sugar (the 2-Deoxyribose sugar/Phosphate group region is regarded as the 'backbone' of DNA strands)
The complementary base pairs in DNA interact with one another via hydrogen bonds:
- A-T interactions consist of 2 intermolecular Hydrogen bonds
- G-C interactions consist of 3 intermolecular Hydrogen bonds
These interactions form bridges between two DNA chains, thus creating a double stranded 'ladder' shaped structure.