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ribosides

Ribosides are a class of glycosides in which the sugar component is ribose. In biochemistry, the term is frequently used to refer to ribonucleosides, compounds in which a ribose sugar is linked to a nitrogenous base (a purine or pyrimidine) by a beta-N-glycosidic bond. Common ribonucleosides include adenosine, guanosine, cytidine, uridine, and inosine. The deoxyribose counterparts are called deoxyribonucleosides, with thymidine being a well-known example.

Structure and nomenclature

Ribose in these molecules typically adopts the beta-D-ribofuranose form, and the glycosidic bond forms at the

Biological relevance

Ribonucleosides occur naturally as components of RNA and participate in signaling and metabolism. They also serve

Summary

Ribosides chiefly denote ribonucleosides, structures formed by a ribose sugar linked to a nitrogenous base. They

anomeric
carbon
(C1′)
of
the
sugar.
Nucleosides
are
the
building
blocks
of
nucleotides,
which
carry
phosphate
groups
and
participate
in
a
wide
range
of
cellular
processes.
Names
of
nucleosides
end
in
-osine
(adenosine,
guanosine,
cytidine,
uridine,
inosine);
thymidine
is
the
corresponding
deoxyribonucleoside.
as
precursors
in
salvage
pathways
that
recycle
bases
into
nucleotides.
In
pharmacology,
many
ribonucleoside
analogs
have
therapeutic
uses
as
antiviral
or
anticancer
agents,
reflecting
the
central
role
of
nucleoside
chemistry
in
biology.
A
notable
modern
example
is
nicotinamide
riboside,
a
riboside
that
acts
as
a
precursor
to
the
coenzyme
NAD+.
are
fundamental
to
nucleic
acid
biology
and
have
broad
relevance
in
medicine
through
nucleoside
analogs
and
NAD+
metabolism.