when you ask for common cold you are talking maybe about rhinovirus
and rhinovirus they have RNA
DNA of course because mononucleosis has to go through mitosis to get to be DNA. RNA dosent even have mitosis as one of its stages through the human body cycle.
Deoxy-ribonucleic acid (DNA) and ribonucleic acid (RNA)
Nucleotides do not have DNA or RNA. DNA and RNA are composed of nucleotides.
DNA and RNA both contain in all four nitrogen bases. classified into purines and pyrimidines. DNA and RNA in common have Thymine, cytosine and Guanine as the three nitrogen bases. DNA has adenine and instead of adenine RNA has uracil as the fourth nitrogen base.
phrosphate and deoxyribose
The influenza virus contains Both DNA and RNA.Its an exception.
No the cold virus is rhinovirus,where as HIV&AIDS is a retrovirus it reproduces by changing DNA into RNA.
What a cell and a virus have in common is the RNA or DNA. The virus can be either a RNA virus or a DNA virus.
The vast majority of common cold viruses, primarily rhinoviruses and coronaviruses, are single-strand RNA viruses.
Some viruses move RNA, some DNA; but RNA is more common.
Adenine,Thyamine,Guanine common to both.Cytocine in DNA.Uracil in RNA
In the hereditary information of DNA and RNA is a common place, in the chromosomes and center of cells
Deoxy-ribonucleic acid (DNA) and ribonucleic acid (RNA)
Nucleotides do not have DNA or RNA. DNA and RNA are composed of nucleotides.
DNA and RNA both contain in all four nitrogen bases. classified into purines and pyrimidines. DNA and RNA in common have Thymine, cytosine and Guanine as the three nitrogen bases. DNA has adenine and instead of adenine RNA has uracil as the fourth nitrogen base.
phrosphate and deoxyribose
The enzyme that transcribes the DNA into RNA is called RNA polymerase.
RNA can move and DNA cant. DNA has a double helix strand and RNA is a single strand.