Yes, nitrogen is found in nucleic acids in the form of nitrogenous base. Actually, nucleic acids (DNA and RNA) are linear polymers of nucleotides (a purine or pyrimidine nitrogenous base + a pentose sugar + a phosphate group).
Yes nucleic acid contains traces of phosphorous.
No.
(Chemically it's POSSIBLE to synthesize a molecule that is simultaneously an amino acid and a phosphate, but normally they're two different types of compounds.)
Yes, a nucleic acid nucleotide has a phosphate group component.
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the phosphate group
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phosphorus is not magnetic
No, phosphorus is an element.
phosphorus is not stable
As in in a nucleotide?
A nucleotide contains the elements carbon, nitrogen, hydrogen, oxygen and phosphorus.
the phosphate group
Yes because it can replace the phosphorus atom in the phosphate group.
All nucleotides have a phosphorus atom that can be replaced with 32P
The monomer of nucleic acids is a nucleotide, which consists of a phosphate group, a sugar molecule (ribose or deoxyribose), and a nitrogenous base (adenine, guanine, cytosine, thymine, or uracil).
A nucleotide is the subunit of DNA that consists of a nitrogenous base (adenine, cytosine, guanine, thymine), a sugar (deoxyribose), and a phosphate group. These nucleotides are the building blocks of DNA molecules.
nitrogenous base (either uracil, adenine, guanine, cytosine), ribose (a 5-carbon sugar), and a phosphate group (phosphorus with 4 oxygens)
A nucleotide does not contain an organic acid.A nucleotide is similar to a nucleoside but does not contain a polymerase.
A U nucleotide is a type of ribonucleotide that is a component of RNA (ribonucleic acid). It stands for uracil, one of the four nucleobases found in RNA molecules, along with adenine, cytosine, and guanine. In RNA, uracil pairs with adenine during the process of transcription.
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Nucleotide is the monomer. Nucleotide is the monomer of Nucleic Acids.