Social Sciences, asked by anandanand26464, 6 months ago

what is meant by GTP​

Answers

Answered by devguru01
2

Guanosine-5'-triphosphate is a purine nucleoside triphosphate. It is one of the building blocks needed for the synthesis of RNA during the transcription process. Its structure is similar to that of the guanosine nucleoside, the only difference being that nucleotides like GTP have phosphates on their ribose sugar.

Answered by nikhilprb2299
1

Answer:

Guanosine-5'-triphosphate (GTP) is a purine nucleoside triphosphate.GTP is essential to signal transduction, in particular with G-proteins, in second-messenger mechanisms where it is converted to guanosine diphosphate (GDP) through the action of GTPases. It is one of the building blocks needed for the synthesis of RNA during the transcription process. Its structure is similar to that of the guanosine nucleoside, the only difference being that nucleotides like GTP have phosphates on their ribose sugar.

Explanation:

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