BISC207 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Pyrimidine, Adenine, Thymine

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BISC207 Full Course Notes
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BISC207 Full Course Notes
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The order and the number of the nucleotides have to be in a specific order ( and there has to be a lot of them). They stay in that specific order because they are being held together by strong covalent bonds. Atp is an example of an activated nucleotide. Two covalent molecules with nucleotides on them being held together by hydrogen bonds. It is the genetic information we are going to read. (major groove) because there is more access to the nitrogenous bases. You need a purine to be with a pyrimidine. Hydrogen bonds are going to be what attract them together. Guanine and cysteine have 3 covalent bonds= interact with each other. Adenine and thymine only have two but they are going to interact with each other (gc, at) In double stranded dna, backbones must run in antiparallel directions. 5"-3" and then the other strand is 3"-5".

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