what is the difference between 5 prime and 3 prime on DNA helix?

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The 5’ (5 prime) and 3’ (3 prime) refer to the directionality of the DNA strand, specifically the orientation of the sugar-phosphate backbone. Here’s the key difference:


🧬 Structure

  • Each nucleotide in DNA has a deoxyribose sugar, a phosphate group, and a nitrogenous base.

  • The carbons in the sugar are numbered 1’ to 5’. The primes (′) distinguish them from carbon numbers in the base.


🔁 5’ End

  • The 5’ end has a phosphate group attached to the 5’ carbon of the sugar.

  • It’s considered the starting point of a DNA strand.


🔁 3’ End

  • The 3’ end has a hydroxyl group (-OH) on the 3’ carbon of the sugar.

  • It’s the ending point of a DNA strand.

  • DNA polymerases add new nucleotides to the 3’ end during replication or transcription.


🔄 Double Helix Directionality

  • DNA is antiparallel: one strand runs 5’ → 3’, the other 3’ → 5’.
5' ——————————————> 3'
3' <—————————————— 5'

💡 Why It Matters

  • The direction (5’ to 3’) affects:

    • Replication: DNA polymerase works only 5’ → 3’.

    • Transcription: RNA is synthesized 5’ → 3’.

    • Sequencing and labeling: Always described from 5’ to 3’.


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Tags: neurobiology science
Superlink: 051 ☣Neurobiology 050 🧠Neuroscience

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Created: 10-06-25 19:33