Deoxyribose is the sugar within DNA.
You may know that DNA stands for Deoxyribonucleic Acid.
Deoxyribose is a pentose sugar meaning it has 5 Carbon atoms.
Hope this helps!
The outside of the DNA ladder is made up of a sugar-phosphate backbone. The sugar in DNA is deoxyribose, which alternates with phosphate groups to form the backbone. The nitrogenous bases are attached to this sugar-phosphate backbone on the inside of the ladder.
There is no DNA cell. DNA is inside of cells. DNA contains the sugar deoxyribose, phosphate, and the nitrogen bases adenine (A), thymine (T), guanine (G), and cytosine (C).
Deoxyribose is a five-carbon sugar that is a component of DNA molecules. It is similar to ribose sugar but lacks an oxygen atom on the second carbon. Deoxyribose sugar forms the "backbone" of the DNA molecule, connecting the nucleotide bases.
A double helix of two strands of DNA linked together with sugar-phosphate backbones with bases on the inside.
DNA
No, DNA is not a sugar. DNA is composed of phosphate groups, deoxyribose sugar, and nitrogenous bases, but it is not itself a sugar. Deoxyribose sugar in DNA is a 5-carbon sugar, not a 6-carbon sugar.
DNA contains the sugar deoxyribose.
The sugar that is found in DNA is known as deoxyribose.
DNA contains deoxyribose sugar and it helps in transferring genes .
The sugar that is found in DNA is called Deoxyribose
The sugar found in the backbone of DNA is the deoxyribose.
Yes, ribose sugar is present in RNA, not DNA. DNA contains deoxyribose sugar instead of ribose sugar.