P O
−O
O
N −O
N
N N
N
H H
O
H
N
O
N
Uracil
residue
Ribose
residue
Ribose
residue Adenine
residue
(b)
Anticodon
A
C
5' Terminal C
Anticodon loop
Variable loop
U
3' Terminal, amino
acid attached here
Stem
Hydrogen
bonds (thick
lines)
(a)
Figure 1.33 (a) The hydrogen bonding between uracil and adenine. (b) The two dimensional
cloverleaf representation of the structure of transfer RNA (tRNA) showing the hairpin loops in
the structure
C
GT
A
G
A
T
C
C
G
C
A
CT
C
G
C
G
A
G
C
AT
T
A
T
A C
G
C
GA
G
TA
C
C
G
T
A
C
G
C
C U
T
G U
G
T
AC
G G
G
A
G
A
ACT C
A
A
T
G
C
C
G
T T
AA
T
A
C
TAA
C G T A G C G C T
C
C
T
T
CAA
U
3' end. The new
RNA strand grows
in this direction
3' End
5' End
5' End
3' End
5' End of the
new RNA
strand
DNA double
helix strands
DNA parent strand
Figure 1.34 A schematic representation of a transcription process. Reproduced from G Thomas,
Chemistry for Pharmacists and the Life Sciences, 1996, by permission of Prentice-Hall, a Pearson
Education Company
bonding is catalysed by enzymes known as RNA polymerases. Since only
complementary base pairs can hydrogen bond, the order of bases in the new
RNA strand is determined by the sequence of bases in the parent DNA strand.
In this way DNA controls the genetic information being transcribed into the
RNA molecule. This information is in the form of a series of exons and
introns complementary to those found in the parent gene. The strands of
DNA contain start and stop signals, which control the size of the RNA molecule
32 BIOLOGICAL MOLECULES