Examples of purine in the following topics:
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- Transition substitution refers to a purine or pyrimidine being replaced by a base of the same kind; for example, a purine such as adenine may be replaced by the purine guanine.
- Transversion substitution refers to a purine being replaced by a pyrimidine or vice versa; for example, cytosine, a pyrimidine, is replaced by adenine, a purine.
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- Adenine and guanine are classified as purines.
- The primary structure of a purine consists of two carbon-nitrogen rings.
- Bases can be divided into two categories: purines and pyrimidines.
- Purines have a double ring structure, and pyrimidines have a single ring.
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- The nitrogenous base can be a purine such as adenine (A) and guanine (G), characterized by double-ring structures, or a pyrimidine such as cytosine (C) and thymine (T), characterized by single-ring structures.
- Only the pairing between a purine and pyrimidine can explain the uniform diameter.
- That is to say, at each point along the DNA molecule, the two sugar phosphate backbones are always separated by three rings, two from a purine and one from a pyrimidine.
- Base pairing takes place between a purine and pyrimidine stabilized by hydrogen bonds: A pairs with T via two hydrogen bonds and G pairs with C via three hydrogen bonds.
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- Uric acid is a compound similar to purines found in nucleic acids.
- The enzyme xanthine oxidase makes uric acid from xanthine and hypoxanthine, which in turn are produced from other purines.
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- For example, a certain purine can only pair with a certain pyrimidine.
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- Bases can be divided into two categories: purines and pyrimidines.
- Purines have a double ring structure, and pyrimidines have a single ring.