Nucleoside: Difference between revisions

From Citizendium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Robert Badgett
No edit summary
imported>Robert Badgett
(Inserted table adapted from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nucleoside)
Line 1: Line 1:
In [[biology]], '''nucleosides''' are "[[purine]] or [[pyrimidine]] bases attached to a ribose or deoxyribose."<ref>{{MeSH}}</ref>
In [[biology]], '''nucleosides''' are "[[purine]] or [[pyrimidine]] bases attached to a ribose or deoxyribose."<ref>{{MeSH}}</ref>


A [[nucleotide]] is a nucleoside (a [[purine]] or [[pyrimidine]] base plus a ribose) with a phosphate group added.
{| border="1" cellspacing="0" align="right"
|- align="center" valign="bottom"
! Nucleobase
! Ribonucleoside<br/>([[RNA]])
! Deoxynucleoside<br/>([[DNA]])
|-
| colspan="3" align="center"|[[Purine]] bases
|- align="center" valign=""
| [[Adenine]]<br/>
| [[Adenosine]]<br/>A
| [[Deoxyadenosine]]<br/>dA
|- align="center" valign=""
| [[Guanine]]<br/>
| [[Guanosine]]<br/>G
| [[Deoxyguanosine]]<br/>dG
|-
|colspan="3" align="center"|[[Pyrimidine]] bases
|- align="center" valign=""
| [[Thymine]]<br/>
| [[5'-Methyluridine]]<br/>m<sup>5</sup>U
| [[Thymidine]]<br/>dT
|- align="center" valign=""
| [[Uracil]]<br/>
| [[Uridine]]<br/>U
| [[Deoxyuridine]]<br/>dU
|- align="center" valign=""
| [[Cytosine]]<br/>
| [[Cytidine]]<br/>C
| [[Deoxycytidine]]<br/>dC
|-
|}
A [[nucleotide]] is a nucleoside (a [[purine]] or [[pyrimidine]] base plus a pentose sugar) with a phosphate group added.


==References==
==References==
<references/>
<references/>

Revision as of 16:56, 4 December 2009

In biology, nucleosides are "purine or pyrimidine bases attached to a ribose or deoxyribose."[1]

Nucleobase Ribonucleoside
(RNA)
Deoxynucleoside
(DNA)
Purine bases
Adenine
Adenosine
A
Deoxyadenosine
dA
Guanine
Guanosine
G
Deoxyguanosine
dG
Pyrimidine bases
Thymine
5'-Methyluridine
m5U
Thymidine
dT
Uracil
Uridine
U
Deoxyuridine
dU
Cytosine
Cytidine
C
Deoxycytidine
dC

A nucleotide is a nucleoside (a purine or pyrimidine base plus a pentose sugar) with a phosphate group added.

References