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BOL 157: BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY Lecture 14: Nucleic acids Lecturer: Christopher Larbie, PhD Introduction • Knowledge of how genes are expressed and how they can be manipulated is becoming increasingly important for understanding nearly every aspect of biochemistry. • In this lecture we shall describe the chemical structures of nucleic acids, and how we have come to know that DNA as the carrier of genetic information, the structure of the nucleotide bases, denaturation of DNA, and various forms of DNA and RNA. NUCLEOTIDES AND NUCLEIC ACIDS • Nucleotides and their derivatives are biologically ubiquitous substances that participate in nearly all biochemical processes: 1. They form the monomeric units of nucleic acids and thereby play central roles in both the storage and the expression of genetic information. 2. Nucleoside triphosphates, most conspicuously ATP, are the ―energy-rich‖ end products of the majority of energy-releasing pathways and the substances whose utilization drives most energy-requiring processes. 3. Most metabolic pathways are regulated, at least in part, by the levels of nucleotides such as ATP and ADP. • Moreover, certain nucleotides function as intracellular signals that regulate the activities of numerous metabolic processes. 4. Nucleotide derivatives, such as nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, flavin adenine dinucleotide, and coenzyme A, are required participants in many enzymatic reactions. 5. As components of the enzyme-like nucleic acids known as ribozymes, nucleotides have important catalytic activities themselves. Nucleotides, Nucleosides, and Bases • Nucleotides are phosphate esters of a five-carbon sugar (which is therefore known as a pentose) in which a nitrogenous base is covalently linked to C-1’ of the sugar residue. • In ribonucleotides, the monomeric units of RNA, the pentose is D-ribose, whereas in deoxyribonucleotides (or just deoxynucleotides), the monomeric units of DNA. • The pentose is 2’-deoxy- D-ribose (note that the ―primed‖ numbers refer to the atoms of the ribose residue; ―unprimed‖ numbers refer to atoms of the nitrogenous base) •The phosphate group may be bonded to C5’ of the pentose to form a 5’-nucleotide or to its C3’ to form a 3’-nucleotide •If the phosphate group is absent, the compound is known as a nucleoside. A 5’-nucleotide, for example, may therefore be referred to as a nucleoside-5’-phosphate. •In all naturally occurring nucleotides and nucleosides, the bond linking the nitrogenous base to the pentose C1’ atom (which is called a glycosidic bond) extends from the same side of the ribose ring as does the C4’-C5’ bond (the β configuration) rather than from the opposite side (the α configuration). •Note that nucleotide phosphate groups are doubly ionized at physiological pH’s; that is, nucleotides are moderately strong acids. The Bases • The nitrogenous bases are planar, aromatic, heterocyclic molecules which, for the most part, are derivatives of either purine or pyrimidine. • The major purine components of nucleic acids are adenine and guanine residues; the major pyrimidine residues are those of cytosine, uracil (which occurs mainly in RNA), and thymine (5-methyluracil, which occurs mainly in DNA) • The purines form glycosidic bonds to ribose via their N9 atoms, whereas pyrimidines do so through their N1 atoms. Absorption of Ultraviolet Light • Nucleic acids strongly absorb ultraviolet light of wavelengths below about 300 nm, with an absorption maximum at ~260 nm and a stronger one below 200 nm. • This property is biologically important because of the resultant induction of mutations, a natural result of exposure to sunlight. • In the laboratory the same property is useful in identification and quantitative analysis of nucleotides. Acid-base chemistry and tautomerism • The ionized phosphate groups of the polymer ―backbone‖ give nucleic acid molecules a high negative charge. • For this reason DNA in cells is usually associated with basic proteins such as the histones or protamines (in spermatozoa), with polycations of amines such as spermidine (H3+NCH2CH2CH2CH2NH2+CH2CH2CH2NH3+), or with alkaline earth cations such as Mg2+. • If the pH of a solution containing double helical DNA is either lowered to ~3 or raised to ~12, the two strands unravel and can be separated. • Over the entire range of pH the alternating sugar- phosphate backbone of the polymeric chains remains negatively charged. • However, depending on the pH, the bases can be protonated or deprotonated with a resultant breaking of the hydrogen bonds that hold the pairs of bases together. • Pyrimidines and purines, which contain the –NH2 group, are weakly basic. • The cationic protonated conjugate acid forms of cytidine, adenosine, and guanosine have pKa values of 4.2, 3.5, and 2.7, respectively. • Similar values are observed for the 5'-nucleotides. In these compounds it is not the –NH2 group that binds the proton but an adjacent nitrogen atom in the ring. • The bases have substantial aromatic character. • This can be understood in terms of electronic interaction with the adjacent oxygen • Under basic conditions the proton on N-3 of uridine or thymine or on N-1 of guanosine can dissociate with a pKa of ~9.2 • These ―bases‖ are actually weak acids. Reactions of Bases • The purines and pyrimidines are relatively stable compounds with considerable aromatic character. • Nevertheless, they react with many different reagents and, under some relatively mild conditions, can be completely degraded to smaller molecules. • The chemistry of these reactions is complex and is made more so by the fact that a reaction at one site on the ring may enhance the reactivity at other sites. • The reactions of nucleic acids are largely the same as those of the individual nucleosides or nucleotides. • The rates of reaction are often influenced by the position in the polynucleotide chain and by whether the nucleic acid is single or double stranded. • The reactions of nucleosides and nucleotides are best understood in terms of the electronic properties of the various positions in the bases. • Most of the chemical reactions are nucleophilic addition or displacement reactions. • Positions 2, 4, and 6 of pyrimidine bases are deficient in electrons and are therefore able to react with nucleophilic reagents. • The 6 position is especially reactive toward additions, while the 2 position is the least reactive • The corresponding electron-deficient positions in the purine bases are 2, 6, and 8 • These positions, which are marked by asterisks, have electrophilic character in all of the commonly occurring pyrimidines and purines The Chemical Structures of DNA and RNA • The chemical structures of the nucleic acids were elucidated by the early 1950s largely through the efforts of Phoebus Levene, followed by the work of Alexander Todd. • Nucleic acids are, with few exceptions, linear polymers of nucleotides whose phosphate groups bridge the 3’ and 5’ positions of successive sugar residues. • The phosphates of these polynucleotides, the phosphodiester groups, are acidic, so that, at physiological pH’s, nucleic acids are polyanions. • Polynucleotides have directionality, that is, each has a 3’ end (the end whose C3’ atom is not linked to a neighbouring nucleotide) and a 5’ end (the end whose C5’ atom is not linked to a neighbouring nucleotide). DNA’s Base Composition Is Governed by Chargaff’s Rules • DNA has equal numbers of adenine and thymine residues (A = T) and equal numbers of guanine and cytosine residues (G = C) • These relationships, known as Chargaff’s rules. • Chargaff also found that the base composition of DNA from a given organism is characteristic of that organism, that is, it is independent of the tissue from which the DNA is taken as well as the organism’s age, its nutritional state, or any other environmental factor. •. • DNA’s base composition varies widely among different organisms • It ranges from ~25% to 75% G = C in different species of bacteria. It is, however, more or less constant among related species; for example, in mammals G = C ranges from 39% to 46%. • RNA, which usually occurs as single-stranded molecules, has no apparent constraints on its base composition. • However, double-stranded RNA, which comprises the genetic material of certain viruses, also obeys Chargaff’s rules (here A base pairs with U in the same way it does with T in DNA). Base Pairs, Triplets, and Quartets • The purine and pyrimidine bases are the ―side chains‖ of the nucleic acids. • The polar groups that are present in the bases can form hydrogen bonds to other nucleic acid chains, e.g., in the base pairs of the DNA double helix, and also to proteins. • The number of both electron donor groups and proton donors available for hydrogen bonding is large and more than one mode of base pairing is possible. • While X-ray diffraction studies indicate that it is these pairs that usually exist in DNA, other possibilities must be considered. • For example, Hoogsteen proposed an alternative A-T pairing using the 6-NH2 and N-7 of adenine. • Here the distance spanned by the base pair, between the C-1' sugar carbons, is 0.88 nm, less than the 1.08 nm of the Watson–Crick pairs. • Duplexes of certain substituted poly (A) and poly (U) chains contain only Hoogsteen base pairs and numerous X-ray structure determinations have established that Hoogsteen pairs do occur in true nucleic acids. Strengths of base pairs • How strong are the bonds between pairs of bases in DNA? • The question is hard to answer because of the strong interaction of the molecules with polar solvents through hydrogen bonding and hydrophobic effects. • Some insight has come from studies of the association of bases in nonpolar solvents. • The small energies summed over the many base pairs present in the DNA molecule help provide stability to the structure. Stacking of bases • The purines and pyrimidines of nucleic acids, as well as many other compounds with flat ring structures and containing both polar and nonpolar regions, are sparingly soluble in either water or organic solvents. • Molecules of these substances prefer neither type of solvent but adhere tightly to each other in solid crystals. • Both experimental measurements and theoretical computations suggest that hydrogen bonding is the predominant force in the pairing of bases in a vacuum or in nonpolar solvents. • However, in water stacking becomes important. • In a fully extended polynucleotide chain consecutive bases are 0.7 nm apart, twice the van der Waals thickness of a pyrimidine or purine ring, but in doublehelical DNA the distance between consecutive base pairs is only 0.34 nm. • The molar extinction coefficient of a solution of double- helical DNA or RNA is always less by up to 20–30% than that predicted from the spectra of the individual nucleosides. Modification of Nucleic Acid Bases • Some DNAs contain bases that are chemical derivatives of the standard set. • For example, dA and dC in the DNAs of many organisms are partially replaced by N6-methyl-dA and 5-methyl-dC, respectively. • The altered bases are generated by the sequence- specific enzymatic modification of normal DNA. • The modified DNAs obey Chargaff’s rules if the derivatized bases are taken as equivalent to their parent bases. • Likewise, many bases in RNAs and, in particular, those in transfer RNAs (tRNAs) are derivatized Susceptibility of RNA but Not DNA to BaseCatalysed Hydrolysis • RNA is highly susceptible to base-catalysed as to yield a mixture of 2’ and 3’ nucleotides. • In contrast, DNA, which lacks 2’-OH groups, is resistant to base-catalysed hydrolysis and is therefore much more chemically stable than RNA. • This is probably why DNA rather than RNA evolved to be the cellular genetic archive. Levels of organization of structure of DNA • Like proteins, DNA has various levels of organisation of its structure such as Primary, secondary, tertiary and quaternary structures. Primary structure • This refers to a single DNA chain of a long threadlike molecule, composed of numerous DNA. • The primary structure is the backbone of the DNA structure in which the deoxyriboses of successive nucleotides are linked by covalent phosphodiester bridges between the 3’ and 5’ hydroxyl groups of adjacent sugar molecules. Secondary structure • This refers to the steric relationship of bases which are close to each other in the linear arrangement of nucleotides e.g. the double helical structure. • Here, the bases of the two strands lie in the centre of the molecule, with the sugar-phosphate backbone on the outside. • An important feature is that the bases in the two strands are complementary, but not identical. • The complementarity is attributed to the appropriate base pairings of the strands as described by the Chargaff’s rule. • The H-bonding between the bases is weak, but collectively, the H-bonds in the double helix give rise to a stable molecule. • Stability is also achieved by the forces arising from the partial overlap of the hydrophobic bases of successive nucleotides along the chain (base stacking described above). Tertiary structure • This refers to the steric relationship of segments of the polynucleotide that are apart in linear relationship. • A circular double-standed DNA without folding is called a Relaxed DNA and this present the most simple and most stable tertiary structure of DNA. • To fit into cells, chromosomal DNA has to be compactly folded. Examples are relaxed, looped, superhelical conformations and their combinations. Denaturation of DNA • When a solution of duplex DNA is heated above a characteristic temperature, its native structure collapses and its two complementary strands separate and assume a flexible and rapidly fluctuating conformational state known as a random coil. • This denaturation process is accompanied by a qualitative change in the DNA’s physical properties. • For instance, the characteristic high viscosity of native DNA solutions, which arises from the resistance to deformation of its rigid and rod-like duplex molecules, drastically decreases when the duplex DNA decomposes (denatures) to two relatively freely jointed single strands. • The most convenient way of monitoring the amount of nucleic acid present is by its ultraviolet (UV) absorbance spectrum. When DNA denatures, its UV absorbance increases by ~40% at all wavelengths. • This phenomenon is known as the hyperchromic effect, and results from the disruption of the electronic interactions among nearby bases. • DNA’s hyperchromic shift, as monitored at a particular wavelength (usually 260 nm), occurs over a narrow temperature range. • This indicates that the collapse of one part of the duplex DNA’s structure destabilizes the remainder, a phenomenon known as a cooperative process. • The denaturation of DNA may be described as the melting of a one-dimensional solid, represented by a melting curve and the temperature at its midpoint is known as the melting temperature, Tm. • The stability of the DNA double helix, and hence its Tm, depends on several factors, including the nature of the solvent, the identities and concentrations of the ions in solution, and the pH. • For example, duplex DNA denatures (its Tm decreases) under alkaline conditions that cause some of the bases to ionize and thereby disrupt their base pairing interactions. • The Tm increases linearly with the mole fraction of G - C base pairs, which indicates that triply hydrogen bonded G - C base pairs are more stable than doubly hydrogen bonded A - T base pairs. Types of DNA Structure • Three major forms of DNA are double stranded and connected by interactions between complementary base pairs. These are terms A-form, B-form, and Z-form DNA. B-form DNA • The information from the base composition of DNA, the knowledge of dinucleotide structure, and the insight that the X-ray crystallography suggested a helical periodicity. • They proposed two strands of DNA, each in a right-hand helix, wound around the same axis. The two strands are held together by H-bonding between the bases (in anticonformation). • The two strands are not in a simple side-by-side arrangement, which would be called a paranemic joint. • Rather the two strands are coiled around the same helical axis and are intertwined with themselves (which is referred to as a plectonemic coil). • One consequence of this intertwining is that the two strands cannot be separated without the DNA rotating, one turn of the DNA for every "untwisting" of the two strands Dimensions of B-form (the most common) of DNA • 0.34 nm between bp, 3.4 nm per turn, about 10 bp per turn • 1.9 nm (about 2.0 nm or 20 A) in diameter Major and minor groove • The major groove is wider than the minor groove in DNA, and many sequence specific proteins interact in the major groove. • The N7 and C6 groups of purines and the C4 and C5 groups of pyrimidines face into the major groove, thus they can make specific contacts with amino acids in DNAbinding proteins. • Thus specific amino acids serve as H-bond donors and acceptors to form H-bonds with specific nucleotides in the DNA. • H-bond donors and acceptors are also in the minor groove, and indeed some proteins bind specifically in the minor groove. • Base pairs stack, with some rotation between them. A-DNA and Z-DNA • A-form DNA has thicker right-handed duplex with a shorter distance between the base pairs for RNA-DNA duplexes and RNA-RNA duplexes. • The Z-DNA is formed by stretches of alternating purines and pyrimidines, e.g. GCGCGC, especially in negatively supercoiled DNA. • A small amount of the DNA in a cell exists in the Z form. • It has been enticing to propose that this different structure is involved in some way in regulation of some cellular function. This include transcription or regulation, but conclusive evidence for or against this proposal is not available yet. Differences between A-form and B-form nucleic acid • The major difference between A-form and B-form nucleic acid is in the conformation of the deoxyribose sugar ring. • It is in the C2' endo-conformation for B-form, whereas it is in the C3' endo-conformation in A-form. • If you consider the plane defined by the C4'-O-C1' atoms of the deoxyribose, in the C2' endoconformation, the C2' atom is above the plane, whereas the C3' atom is above the plane in the C3' endoconformation • The latter conformation brings the 5' and 3' hydroxyls (both esterified to the phosphates linking to the next nucleotides) closer together than is seen in the C2' endoconfromation. • Thus the distance between adjacent nucleotides is reduced by about 1 A in A-form relative to B-form nucleic acid. • A second major difference between A-form and B-form nucleic acid is the placement of base-pairs within the duplex. In B-form, the base-pairs are almost centred over the helical axis, but in A-form, they are displaced away from the central axis and closer to the major groove. The result is a ribbon-like helix with a more open cylindrical core in A-form. DNA as storage of Genetic information • The DNA is a large molecule with infinite variety so can store so much information. • It is the repository of all the information required by the cell. However, the information for the synthesis of proteins accounts for most of the information stored in the DNA. • It is the genes which encode the information that determines the structure of proteins. • In turn, the structure of proteins dictates the activity of the protein which also determines the physiological role of the cell. • Another important characteristic of DNA is its capability to undergo faithful replication. • This ensures that the information contained in it are transmitted from one generation to the other by reproduction of organisms or by cell division or both. • Another important feature is that DNA is a stable molecule resisting hydrolysis and mutations. RIBONUCLEIC ACID (RNA) • Ribonucleic acid (RNA) is a ubiquitous family of large biological molecules that perform multiple vital roles in the coding, decoding, regulation, and expression of genes. • Together with DNA, RNA comprises the nucleic acids, which, along with proteins, constitute the three major macromolecules essential for all known forms of life. • Like DNA, RNA is assembled as a chain of nucleotides, but is usually single-stranded. • Some RNA molecules play an active role within cells by catalysing biological reactions, controlling gene expression, or sensing and communicating responses to cellular signals. • One of these active processes is protein synthesis, a universal function whereby mRNA molecules direct the assembly of proteins on ribosomes. • This process uses transfer RNA (tRNA) molecules to deliver amino acids to the ribosome, where ribosomal RNA (rRNA) links amino acids together to form proteins. • The chemical structure of RNA is very similar to that of DNA, but differs in three main ways: 1. Unlike double-stranded DNA, RNA is a single-stranded molecule in many of its biological roles and has a much shorter chain of nucleotides. However, RNA can, by complementary base pairing, form intra-strand double helixes, as in tRNA. 2. While DNA contains deoxyribose, RNA contains ribose (in deoxyribose there is no hydroxyl group attached to the pentose ring in the 2' position). These hydroxyl groups make RNA less stable than DNA because it is more prone to hydrolysis. 3. The complementary base to adenine is not thymine, as it is in DNA, but rather uracil, which is an unmethylated form of thymine • Like DNA, most biologically active RNAs, including mRNA, tRNA, rRNA, snRNAs, and other noncoding RNAs. They contain self-complementary sequences that allow parts of the RNA to fold and pair with itself to form double helices • Analysis of these RNAs has revealed that they are highly structured. • Unlike DNA, their structures do not consist of long double helices but rather collections of short helices packed together into structures similar to proteins. • In this fashion, RNAs can achieve chemical catalysis, like enzymes. For instance, determination of the structure of the ribosome—an enzyme that catalyses peptide bond formation—revealed that its active site is composed entirely of RNA. Messenger RNA (mRNA) • Messenger RNA (mRNA) is a large family of RNA molecules that convey genetic information from DNA to the ribosome, where they specify the amino acid sequence of the protein products of gene expression. • Following transcription of primary transcript mRNA (pre- mRNA) by RNA polymerase, processed, mature mRNA is translated into a polymer of amino acids: a protein. • As in DNA, mRNA genetic information is encoded in the sequence of nucleotides, which are arranged into codons consisting of three bases each. • Each codon encodes for a specific amino acid, except the stop codons, which terminate protein synthesis. • This process of translation of codons into amino acids requires two other types of RNA: • Transfer RNA (tRNA), that mediates recognition of the codon and provides the corresponding amino acid, and ribosomal RNA (rRNA), that is the central component of the ribosome's protein-manufacturing machinery. Transfer RNA (tRNA) • A Transfer RNA (abbreviated tRNA and archaically referred to as sRNA abbreviating soluble RNA) is an adaptor molecule composed of RNA, typically 73 to 94 nucleotides in length, that serves as the physical link between the nucleotide sequence of nucleic acids (DNA and RNA) and the amino acid sequence of proteins. • It does this by carrying an amino acid to the protein synthetic machinery of a cell (ribosome) as directed by a three-nucleotide sequence (codon) in a messenger RNA (mRNA). • As such, tRNAs are a necessary component of protein translation, the biological synthesis of new proteins according to the genetic code. • The specific nucleotide sequence of an mRNA specifies which amino acids are incorporated into the protein product of the gene from which the mRNA is transcribed. • The role of tRNA is to specify which sequence from the genetic code corresponds to which amino acid. • One end of the tRNA matches the genetic code in a three- nucleotide sequence called the anticodon. • The anticodon forms three base pairs with a codon in mRNA during protein biosynthesis. • The mRNA encodes a protein as a series of contiguous codons, each of which is recognized by a particular tRNA. • On the other end of the tRNA is a covalent attachment to the amino acid that corresponds to the anticodon sequence. • Each type of tRNA molecule can be attached to only one type of amino acid, so each organism has many types of tRNA . • In fact, because the genetic code contains multiple codons that specify the same amino acid, there are many tRNA molecules bearing different anticodons which also carry the same amino acid. • The covalent attachment to the tRNA 3’ end is catalysed by enzymes called aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases. • During protein synthesis, tRNAs with attached amino acids are delivered to the ribosome by proteins called elongation factors (EF-Tu in bacteria, eEF-1 in eukaryotes). • These aid in decoding the mRNA codon sequence. • If the tRNA's anticodon matches the mRNA, another tRNA already bound to the ribosome transfers the growing polypeptide chain from its 3’ end to the amino acid attached to the 3’ end of the newly delivered tRNA, a reaction catalysed by the ribosome. Ribosomal RNA • Ribosomal ribonucleic acid (rRNA) is the RNA component of the ribosome. • It is essential for protein synthesis in all living organisms. It constitutes the predominant material within the ribosome, which is approximately 60% rRNA and 40% protein by weight. • Ribosomes contain two major rRNAs and 50 or more proteins. • The LSU and SSU rRNAs are found within the large and small ribosomal subunits, respectively. • The LSU rRNA acts as a ribozyme, catalysing peptide bond formation. • rRNA sequences are widely used for working out evolutionary relationships among organisms, since they are of ancient origin and are found in all known forms of life. Small Nuclear RNA • Small nuclear ribonucleic acid (snRNA), also commonly referred to as U-RNA, is a class of small RNA molecules that are found within the nucleus of eukaryotic cells. • The length of an average snRNA is approximately 150 nucleotides. • They are transcribed by either RNA polymerase II or RNA polymerase III, and studies have shown that their primary function is in the processing of pre-mRNA (hnRNA) in the nucleus. • They have also been shown to aid in the regulation of transcription factors (7SK RNA) or RNA polymerase II (B2 RNA), and maintaining the telomeres. • snRNA are always associated with a set of specific proteins, and the complexes are referred to as small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNP) often pronounced "snurps‖. • Each snRNP particle is composed of several Sm proteins, the snRNA component, and snRNP specific proteins. • The most common snRNA components of these complexes are known, respectively, as: U1 snRNA, U2 snRNA, U4 snRNA, U5 snRNA, and U6 snRNA. • Their nomenclature derives from their high uridine content. • A large group of snRNAs are known as small nucleolar RNAs (snoRNAs). These are small RNA molecules that play an essential role in RNA biogenesis and guide chemical modifications of ribosomal RNAs (rRNAs) and other RNA genes (tRNA and snRNAs). • They are located in the nucleolus and the Cajal bodies of eukaryotic cells (the major sites of RNA synthesis), where they are called scaRNAs (small Cajal body-specific RNAs). Non-Coding RNA • A non-coding RNA (ncRNA) is a functional RNA molecule that is not translated into a protein. • Less-frequently used synonyms are non-protein-coding RNA (npcRNA), non-messenger RNA (nmRNA) and functional RNA (fRNA). • The term small RNA (sRNA) is often used for short bacterial ncRNAs. • The DNA sequence from which a non-coding RNA is transcribed is often called an RNA gene. • Non-coding RNA genes include highly abundant and functionally important RNAs such as transfer RNA (tRNA) and ribosomal RNA (rRNA), as well as RNAs such as snoRNAs, microRNAs, siRNAs, snRNAs, exRNAs, and piRNAs and the long ncRNAs that include examples such as Xist and HOTAIR. • The number of ncRNAs encoded within the human genome is unknown, however, recent transcriptomic and bioinformatic studies suggest the existence of thousands of ncRNAs. • Since many of the newly identified ncRNAs have not been validated for their function, it is possible that many are non-functional. Other nuclei acids and analogs • When adenine is deaminated, hypoxanthine is formed, and the deamination of guanine gives xanthine. • Both are enzymatically oxidized to give uric acid. Uric acid can form sodium salts which can deposit in soft tissues, giving rise to inflammation of affected tissues as occurs in gout. • Others have pharmacological activities including caffeine, theobromine and theophylline. • Nuclei acid analogs are compounds which are have similar structures to the pyrimidines or purines or their nucleosides and can be exploited as drugs particularly as anticancer. • Example, 5-flurouracil, 6-thioguanine, 6-mercaptopurine and 3’-azido-2’,3’-dideoxythymine or azidodideoxythymine (AZT). • These analogs are incorporated in nuclei acids of proliferating cancer cells, inhibiting growth.