Transfer RNA is unique among nucleic acids in its content of  "unusual" bases. An unusual base is any purine or pyrimidine ring except the  usual A, G, C, and U from which all RNAs are synthesized. All other bases are  produced by modification of one of the four bases  after it has been incorporated into the polyribonucleotide chain.
All classes of RNA display some degree of modification, but  in all cases except tRNA this is confined to rather simple events, such as the  addition of methyl groups. In tRNA, there is a vast range of modifications,  ranging from simple methylation to wholesale restructuring of the purine ring.  Modifications occur in all parts of the tRNA molecule There are >50 different types of modified bases in tRNA.
Figure 7.7 shows some of the more  common modified bases. Modifications of pyrimidines (C and U) are less complex  than those of purines (A and G). In addition to the modifications of the bases  themselves, methylation at the 2
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?O position of the ribose  ring also occurs.
The most common modifications of uridine are  straightforward. Methylation at position 5 creates ribothymidine (T). The base  is the same commonly found in DNA; but here it is attached to ribose, not  deoxyribose. In RNA, thymine constitutes an unusual base, originating by  modification of U.
Dihydrouridine (D) is generated by the saturation of a  double bond, changing the ring structure. Pseudouridine (?) interchanges the positions of N and C atoms (see Figure 24.40). And 4-thiouridine has sulfur substituted for  oxygen.
The nucleoside inosine is found normally in the cell as an  intermediate in the purine biosynthetic pathway. However, it is not incorporated  directly into RNA, where instead its existence depends on modification of A to  create I. Other modifications of A include the addition of complex  groups.
Two complex series of nucleotides depend on modification of  G. The Q bases, such as queuosine, have an additional pentenyl ring added via an  NH linkage to the methyl group of 7-methylguanosine. The pentenyl ring may carry  various further groups. The Y bases, such as wyosine, have an additional ring  fused with the purine ring itself; the extra ring carries a long carbon chain,  again to which further groups are added in different cases.
The modification reaction usually involves the alteration  of, or addition to, existing bases in the tRNA. An exception is the synthesis of  Q bases, where a special enzyme exchanges free queuosine with a guanosine  residue in the tRNA. The reaction involves breaking and remaking bonds on either  side of the nucleoside.
The modified nucleosides are synthesized by specific  tRNA-modifying enzymes. The original nucleoside present at each position can be  determined either by comparing the sequence of tRNA with that of its gene or  (less efficiently) by isolating precursor molecules that lack some or all of the  modifications. The sequences of precursors show that different modifications are  introduced at different stages during the maturation of tRNA.
Some modifications are constant features of all tRNA  molecules
?for example, the D residues that give  rise to the name of the D arm, and the 
? found in  the T
?C sequence. On the 3
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 side of the anticodon there is always a  modified purine, although the modification varies widely.
Other modifications are specific for particular tRNAs or  groups of tRNAs. For example, wyosine bases are characteristic of  tRNAPhe in bacteria, yeast, and mammals. There are also some  species-specific patterns.
The many tRNA-modifying enzymes (~60 in yeast) vary greatly  in specificity (for review see Hopper and Phizicky, 2003). In some cases, a single  enzyme acts to make a particular modification at a single position. In other  cases, an enzyme can modify bases at several different target positions. Some  enzymes undertake single reactions with individual tRNAs; others have a range of  substrate molecules. The features recognized by the tRNA-modifying enzymes are  unknown, but probably involve recognition of structural features surrounding the  site of modification. Some modifications require the successive actions of more  than one enzyme.