Ribonucleic acid (RNA) WORLD OF MICROBIOLOGY AND IMMUNOLOGY
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Diagram showing specific base pairing found in DNA and RNA.
them combines with one of the riboses of the backbone to
form a nucleoside, such as adenosine, guanosine, cytidine,
and uridine. The combination of a ribose, a phosphate, and a
given nitrogenous base by its turn results in a nucleotide, such
as adenylate, guanylate, cytidylate, uridylate. Each phospho-
diester bridge links the 3’ carbon at the ribose of one
nucleotide to the 5’ carbon at the ribose of the subsequent
nucleotide, and so on. RNA molecules fold on themselves and
form structures termed hairpin loops, because they have
extensive regions of complementary guanine-cytosine (G-C)
or adenine-uracil (A-U) pairs. Nevertheless, they are single
polynucleotide chains.
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