No .
ribose sugar, phosphate group, nitrogen base (guanine, cytosine, adenine, uracil)
A pentose sugar (ribose or deoxyribose), a phosphate group, and a nitrogenous base (adenine, thymine, guanine, cytosine, or uracil).
for DNA it is Nitrogenous base, deoxyribose sugar, and phosphate group. for RND it is Nitrogenous base, ribose sugar, and phosphate group.
1) a five carbon ribose sugar, 2) a phosphate molecule, 3) one of four nitrogenous bases
ribose sugar, phosphate group, nitrogen base (guanine, cytosine, adenine, uracil)
Out of these options: cytidine, phosphate group, ribose Guanine, phosphate group, ribose adenine, phosphate group, ribose cytosine, phosphate group, ribose deoxyribose, phosphate group, thymine deoxyribose, phosphate group, uracil The answer is: deoxyribose, phosphate group, thymine
A pentose sugar (ribose or deoxyribose), a phosphate group, and a nitrogenous base (adenine, thymine, guanine, cytosine, or uracil).
for DNA it is Nitrogenous base, deoxyribose sugar, and phosphate group. for RND it is Nitrogenous base, ribose sugar, and phosphate group.
A phosphate group, a ribose sugar, or deoxyribose sugar backbone and a nitrogenous base.
Deoxiriibonucleic acids. A ribose sugar, a nitrogenous base and phosphate groups.
3 phosphate groups, 1 ribose, and 1 adenine
1) a five carbon ribose sugar, 2) a phosphate molecule, 3) one of four nitrogenous bases
1:A nitrogenous Base purine or pyrimidine; 2 : A pentose sugar ribose or deoxyribose ; 3: ortho phosphoric acid.
A ribose sugar ring (5 carbon ring with a 6th carbon sticking off the 5' carbon), a nitrogenous base (ATCG), and a phosphate group (ATP, or adenosine triphosphate if not currently part of DNA, AMP, or adenosine monophosphate, if currently in DNA). In DNA, the phosphate groups link the ribose together, and the ribose is what connects to the nitrogenous base, which forms the double-helix structure with the bases sticking in from the sugar-phosphate backbone.
Nucleotides are Sugar+Phosphate+Nitrogen base.