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RNA (Ribonucleic Acid) contains Ribose. Ribose is a type of sugar that helps make up the backbone of RNA, along with a phosphate group.
Pretty sure it's both, because they break down the sugar phosphate backbone of the DNA, but also creates mRNA molecules.
No, DNA is composed of: deoxyribose sugar phosphate backbone nucleotide
Polynucleotides is a chemical way to refering to DNA or RNA. The backbone of a DNA or RNA is an alternating sequence of sugars and phosphates. If the chain is DNA the sugar is deoxyribonucleic acid. If the chain if RNA, the sugar is ribonucleic acid.
Nucleotides are attached to each other through a sugar-phosphate backbone. The phosphate group of one nucleotide is attached to the sugar molecule of another nucleotide, forming a chain. Additionally, nucleotides are also attached to nitrogenous bases, such as adenine, cytosine, guanine, or thymine (in case of DNA) or uracil (in case of RNA).
Like DNA, the backbone of RNA consists of a sugar molecule and a phosphate group; the difference is that in RNA the sugar is ribose, whereas in DNA it's deoxyribose.
The backbone of DNA is made up of deoxyribose, a sugar, and are linked together by phosphodiester bonds. RNA is similar but the sugar is called ribose.
Components that form the backbone of DNA and RNA are the same: repeating units of a sugar and a phosphate. In case of DNA, sugar is deoxyribose and in case of RNA the sugar is ribose. Both of these molecules are very important in the filed of genetics.
Both DNA and RNA contain a sugar phosphate group as the backbone to their structure. In DNA the sugar is deoxyribose, where as in RNA it is just ribose.
RNA (Ribonucleic Acid) contains Ribose. Ribose is a type of sugar that helps make up the backbone of RNA, along with a phosphate group.
Phosphates and sugars.
This is found both in DNA and Rna.
Ribose is the sugar that forms the backbone of RNA, along with phosphate. The form of this sugar found in DNA is deoxyribose - which has lost an oxygen from its 2 position.
DNA and RNA both have a sugar-phosphate backbone and nitrogenous bases. The bases found in both DNA and RNA are Adenine, Guanine and Cytosine.
Pretty sure it's both, because they break down the sugar phosphate backbone of the DNA, but also creates mRNA molecules.
They (along with the phosphate group) create the backbone that holds the nitrogenous bases in place.
Phosphorus is found in the bones and teeth in the form of phosphate salts. It is a component of ADP and ATP, molecules essential for the transfer of energy in the cells. phosphorus is also in the sugar-phosphate "backbone" of nucleic acids (DNA and RNA) that holds the molecules together.