deoxynucleosides
Deoxynucleosides are the glycosylamine components of DNA, consisting of a 2'-deoxyribose sugar covalently linked to one of the four nitrogenous bases: adenine, guanine, cytosine, or thymine. They lack the phosphate group that characterizes nucleotides. The sugar is the 2'-deoxyribose, and the glycosidic bond is typically beta, connecting the C1' of the sugar to a nitrogen on the base.
In terms of bonding, purine bases (adenine and guanine) attach to the sugar via the N9 atom,
Biological role and metabolism: deoxynucleosides themselves do not carry phosphate, but they are central intermediates in
Medical relevance: deoxynucleoside analogs are important in medicine. Some modified deoxynucleosides mimic natural ones but disrupt