The
phosphodiester backbone of DNA and RNA consists of pairs of
deoxyribose or
ribose sugars linked by phosphates at the respective 3' and 5' positions. The backbone is negatively charged and
hydrophilic, which allows strong interactions with water. Sugar-phosphate backbone forms the structural framework of
nucleic acids, including
DNA and
RNA. Sugar phosphates are defined as carbohydrates to which a phosphate group is bound by an ester or an either linkage, depending on whether it involves an alcoholic or a hemiacetalic hydroxyl, respectively.
Solubility, acid
hydrolysis rates, acid strengths, and ability to act as sugar group donors are the knowledge of physical and chemical properties required for the analysis of both types of sugar phosphates. The
photosynthetic carbon reduction cycle is closely associated with sugar phosphates, and sugar phosphates are one of the key molecules in metabolism, oxidative pentose phosphate pathways,
gluconeogenesis, important intermediates in
glycolysis. Sugar phosphates are not only involved in metabolic regulation and signaling but also involved in the synthesis of other phosphate compounds. == Peptide nucleic acids ==