Xeno nucleic acid
Synthetic nucleic acid analogues / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Xeno nucleic acids (XNA) are synthetic nucleic acid analogues that have a different backbone from the ribose and deoxyribose found in the nucleic acids of naturally occurring RNA and DNA.[1]
This article may require copy editing for Parts are like a school essay with detail about "all things _NA" (off-topic), and personal/informal writing.. (October 2023) |
The same nucleobases can be used to store genetic information and interact with DNA, RNA, or other XNA bases, but the different backbone gives the structure different stability, and it cannot be processed by naturally occurring cellular processes. For example, natural DNA polymerases cannot read and duplicate this information, thus the genetic information stored in XNA is invisible to DNA-based organisms.[2]
As of 2011[update], at least six types of synthetic sugars have been shown to form nucleic acid backbones that can store and retrieve genetic information. Research is now being done to create synthetic polymerases to transform XNA. The study of its production and application has created a field known as xenobiology.[citation needed]