guanine

listen to the pronunciation of guanine
English - Turkish
guanin
(Tıp) Hücre çekirdeğinde nukleik asitlerin yapısınag iren organik bir bileşik
English - English
A substance first obtained from guano; it is a nucleic base and pairs with cytosine in DNA and RNA
[G] nitrogen base, purine, pairs up with cytosine
= One of the purine bases of the ADN and the ARN
a purine base; one of the four molecules containing nitrogen present in the nucleic acids DNA and RNA; designated by letter G
One of the four nitrogenous bases found in DNA; pairs with the base cytosine; often abbreviated as the letter "G"; see Figure B-3
A nitrogenous base, one member of the base pair GC (guanine and cytosine) in DNA See also: base pair, nucleotide
one of the purine nucleic acid bases that make up nucleotides, the building blocks of DNA and RNA
a purine base found in DNA and RNA; pairs with cytosine
A substance obtained from guano, found in the liver and other tissues of animals; as a base it pairs with cytosine in DNA and RNA
A purine base that is a component of nucleotides and thus a normal component of DNA and RNA See the Figure at NHGRI
鳥嘌呤, A nitrogenous base, one member of the base pair G- C (guanine and cytosine)
A nitrogenous base, one member of the base pair GC (guanine and cytosine) in DNA Source : Human Genome Project Information
A nitrogenous base, one member of the base pair GC (guanine and cytosine) DOE]
A purine that is one of the five main bases found in nucleic acids Guanine base pairs with cytosine
One of the four types of nitrogenous bases found in DNA, having the double-ring structure of a class known as purines Guanine always forms complementary base pairing with a DNA pyrimidine base called cytosine Guanine also occurs in RNA molecules Back to Homepage H h
{i} chemical substance found in the liver and pancreas
one nucleotide base of DNA
Organic compound of the purine family, often called a base, consisting of two rings, each containing both nitrogen and carbon atoms, and an amino group. It occurs in combined form in many important biological molecules, particularly nucleic acids, and free or combined in various natural sources, including guano, sugar beets, yeast, and fish scales. In DNA its complementary base is cytosine. It or its corresponding nucleoside or nucleotide may be prepared from nucleic acids by selective techniques of hydrolysis
guanine

    Hyphenation

    gua·nine

    Turkish pronunciation

    gwänin

    Pronunciation

    /ˈgwäˌnēn/ /ˈɡwɑːˌniːn/

    Etymology

    () From guano + -ine.
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