Definition of Methyladenine. Meaning of Methyladenine. Synonyms of Methyladenine

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Methyladenine. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Methyladenine and, of course, Methyladenine synonyms and on the right images related to the word Methyladenine.

Definition of Methyladenine

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Meaning of Methyladenine from wikipedia

- DNA-3-methyladenine glycosylase also known as 3-alkyladenine DNA glycosylase (AAG) or N-methylpurine DNA glycosylase (MPG) is an enzyme that in humans...
- methylation takes place: adenine and cytosine. The modified bases are N6-methyladenine, 5-methylcytosine and N4-methylcytosine. Cytosine methylation is widespread...
- DNA-3-methyladenine glycosylase I (EC 3.2.2.20, deoxyribonucleate 3-methyladenine glycosidase I, 3-methyladenine DNA glycosylase I, DNA-3-methyladenine glycosidase...
- DNA-3-methyladenine glycosylase II (EC 3.2.2.21) is an enzyme that catalyses the following chemical reaction: Hydrolysis of alkylated DNA, releasing 3-methyladenine...
- modifications of the canonical bases plus uracil. Modified Adenine N6-carbamoyl-methyladenine N6-methyadenine Modified Guanine 7-Deazaguanine 7-Methylguanine Modified...
- glycohydrolase (releasing methyladenine and methylguanine) may refer to: DNA-3-methyladenine glycosylase I, an enzyme DNA-3-methyladenine glycosylase II, an...
- pre-meiosis phase and stimulated to complete division by the use of 1-methyladenine. Starfish oocytes are well suited for this research as they are large...
- \rightleftharpoons } S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine + tRNA containing N1-methyladenine Thus, the two substrates of this enzyme are S-adenosyl methionine and...
- DNA adenine methylase, (Dam) (also site-specific DNA-methyltransferase (adenine-specific), EC 2.1.1.72, modification methylase, restriction-modification...
- "Recognition and Processing of a New Repertoire of DNA Substrates by Human 3-Methyladenine DNA Glycosylase (AAG)". Biochemistry. 10 (9): 1850–1861. doi:10.1021/bi8018898...