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Nucleotides are composed of a nitrogenous base, a sugar and a . They serve as units of the – deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) and (RNA), both of which are essential within all on Earth. Nucleotides are obtained in the diet and are also synthesized from common by the .

Nucleotides are composed of three subunit molecules: a , a ( or ), and a phosphate group consisting of one to three . The four nucleobases in DNA are , , , and ; in RNA, is used in place of thymine.

Nucleotides also play a central role in at a fundamental, cellular level. They provide chemical energy—in the form of the nucleoside triphosphates, adenosine triphosphate (ATP), guanosine triphosphate (GTP), cytidine triphosphate (CTP), and uridine triphosphate (UTP)—throughout the cell for the many cellular functions that demand energy, including: , and synthesis, moving the cell and cell parts (both internally and intercellularly), cell division, etc..Alberts B, Johnson A, Lewis J, Raff M, Roberts K & Walter P (2002). Molecular Biology of the Cell (4th ed.). Garland Science. . pp. 120–121. In addition, nucleotides participate in (cyclic guanosine monophosphate or cGMP and cyclic adenosine monophosphate or cAMP) and are incorporated into important cofactors of enzymatic reactions (e.g., , FAD, FMN, NAD, and NADP+).

In experimental , nucleotides can be using to yield radionucleotides.

5-nucleotides are also used in as to enhance the taste, often in the form of a yeast extract.


Structure
A nucleotide is composed of three distinctive chemical sub-units: a five-carbon sugar molecule, a (the two of which together are called a ), and one . With all three joined, a nucleotide is also termed a "nucleoside monophosphate", "nucleoside diphosphate" or "nucleoside triphosphate", depending on how many phosphates make up the phosphate group.
(2005). 9780470016176, Wiley. .

In , nucleotides contain either a or a base—i.e., the nucleobase molecule, also known as a nitrogenous base—and are termed ribonucleotides if the sugar is ribose, or deoxyribonucleotides if the sugar is deoxyribose. Individual phosphate molecules repetitively connect the molecules in two adjacent nucleotide monomers, thereby connecting the nucleotide monomers of a nucleic acid end-to-end into a long chain. These chain-joins of sugar and phosphate molecules create a 'backbone' strand for a single- or . In any one strand, the chemical orientation (directionality) of the chain-joins runs from the 5'-end to the 3'-end ( read: 5 prime-end to 3 prime-end)—referring to the five carbon sites on sugar molecules in adjacent nucleotides. In a double helix, the two strands are oriented in opposite directions, which permits and complementarity between the base-pairs, all which is essential for or transcribing the encoded information found in DNA.

Nucleic acids then are assembled from nucleotides, the . The purine bases and and pyrimidine base occur in both DNA and RNA, while the pyrimidine bases (in DNA) and (in RNA) occur in just one. Adenine forms a with thymine with two hydrogen bonds, while guanine pairs with cytosine with three hydrogen bonds.

In addition to being building blocks for the construction of nucleic acid polymers, singular nucleotides play roles in cellular energy storage and provision, cellular signaling, as a source of phosphate groups used to modulate the activity of proteins and other signaling molecules, and as enzymatic cofactors, often carrying out reactions. Signaling cyclic nucleotides are formed by binding the phosphate group twice to the same sugar molecule, bridging the 5'- and 3'- of the sugar. Some signaling nucleotides differ from the standard single-phosphate group configuration, in having multiple phosphate groups attached to different positions on the sugar. Nucleotide cofactors include a wider range of chemical groups attached to the sugar via the , including and , and in the latter case, the ribose sugar is linear rather than forming the ring seen in other nucleotides.


Synthesis
Nucleotides can be synthesized by a variety of means, both and .

In vitro, may be used during laboratory production of nucleotides. A purified is protected to create a , which can then be used to obtain analogues not found in nature and/or to synthesize an oligonucleotide.

In vivo, nucleotides can be synthesized de novo or recycled through salvage pathways. The components used in de novo nucleotide synthesis are derived from biosynthetic precursors of carbohydrate and metabolism, and from ammonia and carbon dioxide. Recently it has been also demonstrated that cellular bicarbonate metabolism can be regulated by mTORC1 signaling. The liver is the major organ of de novo synthesis of all four nucleotides. De novo synthesis of pyrimidines and purines follows two different pathways. Pyrimidines are synthesized first from aspartate and carbamoyl-phosphate in the cytoplasm to the common precursor ring structure orotic acid, onto which a phosphorylated ribosyl unit is covalently linked. Purines, however, are first synthesized from the sugar template onto which the ring synthesis occurs. For reference, the syntheses of the and nucleotides are carried out by several enzymes in the of the cell, not within a specific . Nucleotides undergo breakdown such that useful parts can be reused in synthesis reactions to create new nucleotides.


Pyrimidine ribonucleotide synthesis
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The synthesis of the pyrimidines CTP and UTP occurs in the cytoplasm and starts with the formation of carbamoyl phosphate from and CO2. Next, aspartate carbamoyltransferase catalyzes a condensation reaction between and carbamoyl phosphate to form carbamoyl aspartic acid, which is cyclized into 4,5-dihydroorotic acid by . The latter is converted to by dihydroorotate oxidase. The net reaction is:

( S)-Dihydroorotate + O2 → Orotate + H2O2

Orotate is covalently linked with a phosphorylated ribosyl unit. The covalent linkage between the ribose and pyrimidine occurs at position C1See IUPAC nomenclature of organic chemistry for details on carbon residue numbering of the unit, which contains a , and N1 of the pyrimidine ring. Orotate phosphoribosyltransferase (PRPP transferase) catalyzes the net reaction yielding orotidine monophosphate (OMP):

Orotate + 5-Phospho-α-D-ribose 1-diphosphate (PRPP) → Orotidine 5'-phosphate + Pyrophosphate

Orotidine 5'-monophosphate is decarboxylated by orotidine-5'-phosphate decarboxylase to form uridine monophosphate (UMP). PRPP transferase catalyzes both the ribosylation and decarboxylation reactions, forming UMP from orotic acid in the presence of PRPP. It is from UMP that other pyrimidine nucleotides are derived. UMP is phosphorylated by two kinases to uridine triphosphate (UTP) via two sequential reactions with ATP. First, the diphosphate from UDP is produced, which in turn is phosphorylated to UTP. Both steps are fueled by ATP hydrolysis:

ATP + UMP → ADP + UDP

UDP + ATP → UTP + ADP

CTP is subsequently formed by the amination of UTP by the catalytic activity of . Glutamine is the NH3 donor and the reaction is fueled by ATP hydrolysis, too:

UTP + Glutamine + ATP + H2O → CTP + ADP + Pi

Cytidine monophosphate (CMP) is derived from cytidine triphosphate (CTP) with subsequent loss of two phosphates.

(2025). 9780974707716, Roberts & Company.


Purine ribonucleotide synthesis
The atoms that are used to build the purine nucleotides come from a variety of sources: [[File:Nucleotides syn1.svg|class=skin-invert-image|thumb|600px|Diagram of the synthesis of IMP.

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The de novo synthesis of purine nucleotides by which these precursors are incorporated into the purine ring proceeds by a 10-step pathway to the branch-point intermediate IMP, the nucleotide of the base . AMP and GMP are subsequently synthesized from this intermediate via separate, two-step pathways. Thus, purine moieties are initially formed as part of the rather than as free bases.

Six enzymes take part in IMP synthesis. Three of them are multifunctional:

  • GART (reactions 2, 3, and 5)
  • PAICS (reactions 6, and 7)
  • ATIC (reactions 9, and 10)

The pathway starts with the formation of . PRPS1 is the that activates R5P, which is formed primarily by the pentose phosphate pathway, to PRPP by reacting it with ATP. The reaction is unusual in that a pyrophosphoryl group is directly transferred from ATP to C1 of R5P and that the product has the α configuration about C1. This reaction is also shared with the pathways for the synthesis of , , and the pyrimidine nucleotides. Being on a major metabolic crossroad and requiring much energy, this reaction is highly regulated.

In the first reaction unique to purine nucleotide biosynthesis, catalyzes the displacement of PRPP's group (PPi) by an amide nitrogen donated from either (N), (N&C), (N), (C1), or CO2. This is the committed step in purine synthesis. The reaction occurs with the inversion of configuration about ribose C1, thereby forming β-5-phosphorybosylamine (5-PRA) and establishing the anomeric form of the future nucleotide.

Next, a glycine is incorporated fueled by ATP hydrolysis, and the carboxyl group forms an amine bond to the NH2 previously introduced. A one-carbon unit from folic acid coenzyme N10-formyl-THF is then added to the amino group of the substituted glycine followed by the closure of the imidazole ring. Next, a second NH2 group is transferred from glutamine to the first carbon of the glycine unit. A carboxylation of the second carbon of the glycin unit is concomitantly added. This new carbon is modified by the addition of a third NH2 unit, this time transferred from an aspartate residue. Finally, a second one-carbon unit from formyl-THF is added to the nitrogen group and the ring is covalently closed to form the common purine precursor inosine monophosphate (IMP).

Inosine monophosphate is converted to adenosine monophosphate in two steps. First, GTP hydrolysis fuels the addition of aspartate to IMP by adenylosuccinate synthase, substituting the carbonyl oxygen for a nitrogen and forming the intermediate adenylosuccinate. Fumarate is then cleaved off forming adenosine monophosphate. This step is catalyzed by adenylosuccinate lyase.

Inosine monophosphate is converted to guanosine monophosphate by the oxidation of IMP forming xanthylate, followed by the insertion of an amino group at C2. NAD+ is the electron acceptor in the oxidation reaction. The amide group transfer from glutamine is fueled by ATP hydrolysis.


Pyrimidine and purine degradation
In humans, pyrimidine rings (C, T, U) can be degraded completely to CO2 and NH3 (urea excretion). That having been said, purine rings (G, A) cannot. Instead, they are degraded to the metabolically inert which is then excreted from the body. Uric acid is formed when GMP is split into the base guanine and ribose. Guanine is deaminated to xanthine which in turn is oxidized to uric acid. This last reaction is irreversible. Similarly, uric acid can be formed when AMP is deaminated to IMP from which the ribose unit is removed to form hypoxanthine. Hypoxanthine is oxidized to xanthine and finally to uric acid. Instead of uric acid secretion, guanine and IMP can be used for recycling purposes and nucleic acid synthesis in the presence of PRPP and aspartate (NH3 donor).


Prebiotic synthesis of nucleotides
Theories about the require knowledge of chemical pathways that permit formation of life's key building blocks under plausible prebiotic conditions. The hypothesis holds that in the there existed free-floating , the fundamental molecules that combine in series to form . Complex molecules like RNA must have arisen from small molecules whose reactivity was governed by physico-chemical processes. RNA is composed of and nucleotides, both of which are necessary for reliable information transfer, and thus Darwinian . Becker et al. showed how pyrimidine can be synthesized from small molecules and , driven solely by wet-dry cycles. Purine nucleosides can be synthesized by a similar pathway. 5'-mono- and di-phosphates also form selectively from phosphate-containing minerals, allowing concurrent formation of with both the purine and pyrimidine bases. Thus a reaction network towards the purine and pyrimidine RNA building blocks can be established starting from simple atmospheric or volcanic molecules.


Unnatural base pair (UBP)
An unnatural base pair (UBP) is a designed subunit (or ) of which is created in a laboratory and does not occur in nature. Examples include d5SICS and . These artificial nucleotides bearing hydrophobic , feature two fused aromatic rings that form a (d5SICS–dNaM) complex or base pair in DNA. E. coli have been induced to replicate a plasmid containing UBPs through multiple generations. This is the first known example of a living organism passing along an expanded genetic code to subsequent generations.


Medical applications of synthetic nucleotides
The applications of synthetic nucleotides vary widely and include disease diagnosis, treatment, or precision medicine.

  1. Antiviral or Antiretroviral agents: several nucleotide derivatives have been used in the treatment against infection with and . Examples of direct nucleoside analog reverse-transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) include Tenofovir disoproxil, Tenofovir alafenamide, and . On the other hand, agents such as , , and must first undergo metabolization via phosphorylation to become activated.
  2. Antisense oligonucleotides (ASO): synthetic have been used in the treatment of rare heritable diseases since they can bind specific transcripts and ultimately modulate protein expression. Spinal muscular atrophy, , homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia, and primary hyperoxaluria type 1 are all amenable to ASO-based therapy. The application of oligonucleotides is a new frontier in precision medicine and management of conditions which are untreatable.
  3. Synthetic guide RNA (gRNA): synthetic nucleotides can be used to design which are essential for the proper function of gene-editing technologies such as CRISPR-Cas9.


Length unit
Nucleotide (abbreviated "nt") is a common unit of length for single-stranded nucleic acids, similar to how is a unit of length for double-stranded nucleic acids.


Abbreviation codes for degenerate bases
The has designated the symbols for nucleotides. Apart from the five (A, G, C, T/U) bases, often degenerate bases are used especially for designing PCR primers. These nucleotide codes are listed here. Some primer sequences may also include the character "I", which codes for the non-standard nucleotide . Inosine occurs in and will pair with adenine, cytosine, or thymine. This character does not appear in the following table, however, because it does not represent a degeneracy. While inosine can serve a similar function as the degeneracy "H", it is an actual nucleotide, rather than a representation of a mix of nucleotides that covers each possible pairing needed.

1
T
U
2
T
T
3
T
T
4


See also


Further reading

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