Nukleotidin
Nukleotidin is a term encountered in some linguistic and educational contexts to denote nucleotide-related molecules. It is not a universally fixed chemical name in English-language biochemistry, and its exact meaning can vary by context. In many cases, it refers broadly to nucleotides or to nucleotide-like compounds used in research and medicine.
A nucleotide is composed of three parts: a nitrogenous base, a five-carbon sugar (ribose in RNA or
In biological systems, nucleotides serve multiple essential roles. They are the monomers that assemble into DNA
Nukleotidin, when used, often designates nucleotides in a broad sense or may refer to specific nucleotide analogs