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2-amino purine is an alkylating agent.
a-True
b-False

User Cantuket
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1 Answer

6 votes

Final answer:

2-Amino purine is not an alkylating agent; it is a nucleoside analog that can mispair with cytosine, potentially leading to a transition from AT to GC base pairs during DNA replication.

Step-by-step explanation:

The question addresses whether 2-amino purine is an alkylating agent or not. Considering the definition and mechanism of action of alkylating agents, which involve adding alkyl groups onto molecules, particularly nucleobases in DNA leading to miscoding, 2-amino purine does not fit this description. Alkylating agents typically include chemicals like nitrogen mustards and nitrosoureas; however, 2-amino purine is a nucleoside analog rather than an alkylating agent. It is able to pair with cytosine and through subsequent rounds of DNA replication, it can lead to an AT to GC base pair transition, which is a mutagenic effect but not the direct alkylation of DNA bases.

User Lcheylus
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