Large Molecules Problem Set
Problem 6: Identification of a monomer unit of a biological macromolecule
Tutorial to help answer the question
The structure shown in the diagram is an example of a monomer unit used in the formation of:
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A. RNA
B. protein
C. DNA
D. polysaccharides
E. lipids
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Tutorial
Nucleotides
The molecule illustrated in the question is a nucleotide. Nucleotides, the monomer units of RNA and DNA, consist of a pentose sugar, either ribose in RNA
or deoxyribose in DNA, a phosphate group, and a nitrogenous base.
As the name implies, a pentose is a 5-membered, puckered ring. Attached to the ring is the phosphate group, which is a phosphorous atom with 4 covalently attached oxygen atoms. Nucleotides also have either a pyrimidine or purine base, attached to the pentose sugar.
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Nitrogenous bases: purines and pyrimidines
Pyrimidines are planar, six-membered rings of 5 carbon and 1 nitrogen atom. Purines are planar, fused N-containing rings. The purine and pyrimidine bases of RNA and DNA are shown below.
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DNA and RNA
RNA and DNA are polymers of nucleotides. The backbone of the polymer is a repeating chain of sugar-phosphate-sugar-phosphate- etc. These polymers have "polarity", meaning having a directionality. The phosphate of the 5'-end of one nucleotide is linked to the 3'-position of the next nucleotide. In the model of DNA (left), the left strand has a polarity of 5' (top) to 3' (bottom), and the other DNA strand has the opposite polarity. The two DNA strands are said to be "antiparallel".
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In the RNA model, note the extra -OH of the pentose sugar, and the use of the uracil base (U) rather than the thymine (T) base of DNA.
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The Biology Project
University of Arizona
Wednesday, September 11, 1996
Contact the Development Team
http://www.biology.arizona.edu
All contents copyright © 1996. All rights reserved.
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