Nucleotide Structure & the Phosphodiester Bond (AQA AS Biology): Revision Note
Exam code: 7401
Nucleotide structure & the phosphodiester bond
Both DNA and RNA are polymers that are made up of many repeating units called nucleotides
Each nucleotide is formed from:
A pentose sugar
The carbon atoms in the sugar are numbered as 1′, 2′, 3′, 4′, and 5′
A nitrogen-containing organic base
A phosphate group

DNA nucleotides
The components of a DNA nucleotide are:
A deoxyribose sugar with hydrogen at the 2' position
A phosphate group
One of four nitrogenous bases - adenine (A), cytosine(C), guanine(G) or thymine(T)
RNA nucleotides
The components of an RNA nucleotide are:
A ribose sugar with a hydroxyl (OH) group at the 2' position
A phosphate group
One of four nitrogenous bases - adenine (A), cytosine(C), guanine(G) or uracil (U)
The presence of the 2' hydroxyl group makes RNA more susceptible to hydrolysis
This is why DNA is the storage molecule and RNA is the transport molecule with a shorter molecular lifespan

Property | DNA | RNA |
---|---|---|
Pentose sugar | Deoxyribose | Ribose |
Bases | Adenine (A) Thyamine (T) Cytosine (C) Guanine (G) | Adenine (A) Uracil (U) Cytosine (C) Guanine (G) |
Structure | Double-stranded (double helix) | Single-stranded |
Phosphodiester bonds
DNA and RNA are polymers (polynucleotides), meaning that they are made up of many nucleotides joined together in long chains
Separate nucleotides are joined via condensation reactions
These condensation reactions occur between the phosphate group of one nucleotide and the pentose sugar of the next nucleotide
A condensation reaction between two nucleotides forms a phosphodiester bond
It is called a phosphodiester bond because it consists of a phosphate group and two ester bonds (phosphate with double bond oxygen attached - oxygen - carbon)
The chain of alternating phosphate groups and pentose sugars produced as a result of many phosphodiester bonds is known as the sugar-phosphate backbone (of the DNA or RNA molecule)

Examiner Tips and Tricks
Although DNA and RNA nucleotides are very similar, make sure you know the key differences between them: unlike DNA, RNA nucleotides never contain the nitrogenous base thymine (in place of this, they contain the nitrogenous base uracil) and unlike DNA, RNA nucleotides contain the pentose sugar ribose (instead of deoxyribose).
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