thymidine
(redirected from thymine deoxyribonucleoside)Also found in: Dictionary, Thesaurus, Encyclopedia.
thymidine
[thi´mĭ-dēn]a nucleoside of DNA.
thy·mi·dine (dThd),
(thī'mi-dēn),1-(2-Deoxyribosyl)thymine; one of the four major nucleosides in DNA (the others being deoxyadenosine, deoxycytidine, and deoxyguanosine).
Synonym(s): deoxythymidine, thymine deoxyribonucleoside
thymidine
/thy·mi·dine/ (thi´mĭ-dēn) thymine linked to ribose, a rarely occurring base in rRNA and tRNA; frequently used incorrectly to denote deoxythymidine. Symbol T.thymidine
(thī′mĭ-dēn′)n.
A nucleoside, C10H14N2O5, composed of thymine and deoxyribose.
thymidine (dThd)
[thī′mədēn]
one of the four major nucleosides in DNA. It is formed by the condensation of thymine with deoxyribose.
thy·mi·dine
(dThd) (thī'mi-dēn)1-(2-deoxyribosyl)thymine; one of the four major nucleosides in DNA (the others being deoxyadenosine, deoxycytidine, and deoxyguanosine).
Synonym(s): deoxythymidine.
Synonym(s): deoxythymidine.
thymidine
a nucleoside of DNA.