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Nucleotide Structure and Function

Nucleotide Structure and Function

Nucleotide Structure and Function

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Nucleotide Components - Basic Bits & Bobs

  • Core units: Pentose sugar, Nitrogenous base, Phosphate(s).
  • Sugars (Pentose):
    • Ribose (RNA): -OH at C2'.
    • Deoxyribose (DNA): -H at C2'.
  • Bases (Nitrogenous):
    • Purines (A, G): Double ring. 📌 Pure As Gold.
    • Pyrimidines (C, T, U): Single ring. T in DNA, U in RNA. 📌 CUT the Py.
  • Phosphate: At 5'-carbon of sugar; imparts acidic nature.
  • NucleoSide: Sugar + Base.
  • NucleoTide: Sugar + Base + PhosphaTe. (📌 'T' for Phosphate) Nucleotide structure: pentose, base, phosphate

⭐ ATP (Adenosine Triphosphate) is the cell's primary energy currency.

Nitrogenous Bases - Purine/Pyrimidine Parade

FeaturePurinesPyrimidines
BasesAdenine (A), Guanine (G)Cytosine (C), Thymine (T), Uracil (U)
RingsTwo (larger; 9-membered)One (smaller; 6-membered)
Mnemonic📌 Pure As Gold📌 CUT the Py (Pie) (T in DNA, U in RNA)

⭐ Thymine (5-methyluracil) is specific to DNA, providing stability. Uracil replaces it in RNA. This difference is crucial for distinguishing the nucleic acids and for DNA repair mechanisms.

Polynucleotide Formation - Chain Gang Chemistry

  • Individual nucleotides polymerize to form polynucleotide chains (DNA/RNA).
  • Linked by phosphodiester bonds: strong covalent bonds.
    • Connects the 5' phosphate group of one nucleotide to the 3' hydroxyl (-OH) group of the next nucleotide.
  • This creates a repeating sugar-phosphate backbone for the nucleic acid strand.
  • The chain exhibits distinct 5' → 3' polarity (directionality).
  • Formation is driven by the hydrolysis of incoming nucleoside triphosphates (NTPs/dNTPs), releasing pyrophosphate ($PP_i$). Polynucleotide chain with 5'-3' phosphodiester linkage

⭐ The 5' → 3' directionality is critical for the processes of DNA replication, transcription, and translation, dictating the sequence of genetic information processing.

DNA & RNA Structures - Helical Harmony

  • DNA (Deoxyribonucleic Acid):

    • Watson-Crick double helix. B-DNA: common right-handed (10.5 bp/turn).
    • Antiparallel strands; major/minor grooves (protein binding).
    • Base pairing: A=T (2 H-bonds), G≡C (3 H-bonds). 📌 At Two, Go Crazy Three.
    • Forms: A-DNA (dehydrated, wider), Z-DNA (left-handed, alternating Pu-Py, e.g., (CG)n).
  • RNA (Ribonucleic Acid):

    • Mostly single-stranded; forms 2° structures (hairpins, loops).
    • Types: mRNA (messenger), tRNA (transfer, cloverleaf), rRNA (ribosomal). tRNA structure, transcription, and processing
  • Key Differences: DNA vs. RNA

    FeatureDNARNA
    SugarDeoxyriboseRibose
    BasesA, G, C, TA, G, C, U
    StrandsDoubleSingle (mostly)
    StabilityMore stableLess stable (2'-OH)

⭐ Z-DNA: left-handed helix, forms at alternating purine-pyrimidine sequences (e.g., (CG)n), zig-zag backbone; potential role in gene regulation.

Diverse Nucleotide Roles - Cellular MVPs

  • Energy Currency: ATP (universal), GTP (protein synthesis, signaling).
  • Coenzyme Components:
    • NAD⁺, NADP⁺ (redox; Niacin, Vit B3 derivative).
    • FAD, FMN (redox; Riboflavin, Vit B2 derivative).
    • Coenzyme A (acyl carrier; Pantothenate, Vit B5 derivative).
  • Second Messengers: cAMP (PKA pathway), cGMP (PKG pathway, vasodilation).
  • Allosteric Regulators: ATP, ADP, AMP modulate key enzymes (e.g., PFK-1).
  • Activated Intermediates: UDP-sugars (glycogen, glycoprotein synthesis), CDP-diacylglycerol (phospholipid synthesis).

⭐ S-adenosylmethionine (SAM), derived from ATP and methionine, is the primary methyl group donor in most biological methylation reactions, including DNA and protein methylation. Crucial for epigenetics and metabolism!

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Nucleotides are phosphate esters of nucleosides (nitrogenous base + pentose sugar).
  • Purines (Adenine, Guanine) have two rings; Pyrimidines (Cytosine, Thymine, Uracil) have one ring.
  • DNA contains deoxyribose (lacks 2'-OH group); RNA contains ribose.
  • Phosphodiester bonds link nucleotides in a 5' → 3' direction, forming the nucleic acid backbone.
  • ATP is the primary energy currency; GTP is crucial for protein synthesis and signal transduction.
  • cAMP and cGMP function as important second messengers in cellular signaling pathways.
  • Chargaff's rules state that in dsDNA: A=T, G=C, and Purines = Pyrimidines (A+G = T+C).

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