Nucleotide

Nucleotide codes
CodeEquivalenceComplement
AAT
CCG
GGC
T or UTA
MA or CK
RA or GY
WA or TW
SC or GS
YC or TR
KG or TM
VA or C or GB
HA or C or TD
DA or G or TH
BC or G or TV
X or NA or C or G or TX

A nucleotide is an organic molecule consisting of a nitrogenous heterocyclic base (a purine or a pyrimidine), a pentose sugar (deoxyribose in DNA or ribose in RNA), and a phosphate or polyphosphate group. (A nucleoside is similar, except that it contains only the sugar and base, without a phosphate.)

Nucleotide names are abbreviated into standard four-letter codes. The first letter is lower case and indicates whether the nucleotide in question is a ribonucleotide (r) or deoxyribonucleotide (d). The second letter indicates the nitrogenous base included (G,A,T,C,U). The third and fourth letters indicate the number of attached phosphates (Mono-, Di-, Tri-) and the presence of a phosphate (P). For example, deoxy-cytosine-triphosphate is abbreviated as dCTP.

Nucleotides are the monomers of nucleic acids and also play important roles in cellular energy transport and transformations (notably ATP and NAD+/NADH) and in enzyme regulation (see for example, protein kinase).

See also

de:Nukleotid es:Nucleótido fr:Nucléotide nl:Nucleotide ja:ヌクレオチド pl:Nukleotyd pt:Nucleótido sv:Nukleotid


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