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Ribonucleic acid, a nucleic acid structurally distinguised from DNA by the presence of an additional oxygen atom attached to the each pentose ring, and functionally distinguished by its multiple roles in the intracellular transmission of genetic information from the site of transcription (from DNA) to the site of translation (into protein).

RNA has four different bases; adenine?, guanine, cytosine, and uracil?. The first three bases are the same as those found in DNA, but uracil replaces thymine? as the complementary base to adenine. There are three main varieties of RNA found in all living cells:

It is thought that the first life on Earth may have been RNA-based, due to RNA's ability to both carry genetic information like DNA and also to catalyze useful biochemical reactions like enzymes. This possiblity is termed the RNA world hypothesis. Even today some viruses, such as retroviruses, use RNA as their sole genetic material. RNA is more unstable than DNA is, however, and is also a less efficient catalyst than an enzyme, and so has fallen out of favour among complex organisms as the preferred genetic material.

Double-stranded RNA, abbreviated dsRNA, is known to inhibit the translation of genes in some eukaryotes, if the dsRNA has the same sequence as the mRNA of the gene. It is speculated that this is a defense mechanism of the cell against viruses (which sometimes use dsRNA) or retroposons (transposons that use dsRNA as an intermediate state). The reaction to dsRNA can be used to easily suppress gene activity in organisms, as it was done for [C. elegans]?, to study the function of the suppressed gene.


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Edited October 12, 2001 12:55 am by Sodium (diff)
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