Nucleotidum
Nucleotida sunt moleculae organicae primae acidorum nucleicorum, sit ADN aut ARN, inter se congregantes millenis et millenis earum, partibus tribus confecta: pentosum, acidum phosphoricum, et unum tantum horum: adeninum (A), guaninum (G), cytosinum (C), thyminum (T), uracilum (U). Etiam, viis metabolicis sat prosunt, ut conditoria energetica adhibita, verbi gratia ATP, aut in signis cellularibus iuvantia.
Structura nucleotidorum
recensereNucleobases
recensereIn natura imprimis quinque nucleobases inveniuntur, ex quibus intra ADN quattuor quinque inveniuntur: guaninum, adeninum, cytosinum, thyminum. Nuper synthesis ADN Hachimojiensis (ADN octonarii) dicti, ADN ex nucleobasibus naturalibus communiter cum adhuc incognitis nucleobasibus constitutum, isoguanino enim et 6-amino-5-nitropyridino-2-olo et 1-methylocytosino et 2-aminoimidazo[1,2-a][1,3,5]triazino-4(1H)-ono (dS)[1]), consecuta est.[2]
Nucleobases naturales
recensereNucleobases ADN Hachimojiensis
recensere-
Isoguaninum (B)
-
1-methylocytosinum (dS)
Nexus interni
Notae
recensere- ↑ in ARN: isocytosinum (rS)
- ↑ Hoshika S., Leal N. A., Kim M. J., Kim M. S., Karalkar N. B., Kim H. J., Bates A. M., Watkins N. E. Jr., SantaLucia H. A., Meyer A. J., et al. (2019). "Hachimoji DNA and RNA: A genetic system with eight building blocks". Science 363 (6429): 884-87.