(cell and molecular biology) A molecule similar enough to a purine or pyrimidine base to substitute for the normal bases, resulting in abnormal base pairing.
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(cell and molecular biology) A molecule similar enough to a purine or pyrimidine base to substitute for the normal bases, resulting in abnormal base pairing.
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| Wikipedia: Base analog |
A base analog is a chemical that can substitute for a normal nucleobase in nucleic acids.
A common example would be 5-bromouracil (5BU), the abnormal base found in the mutagenic nucleotide analog BrdU. When a nucleotide containing 5-bromouracil is incorporated into the DNA, it is most likely to pair with adenine; however, it can spontaneously shift into another isomer which pairs with a different nucleobase, guanine. If this happens during DNA replication, a guanine will be inserted opposite the base analog, and in the next DNA replication, that guanine will pair with a cytosine. This results in a change in one base pair of DNA, specifically a transition mutation.
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