Want this question answered?
Nucleotides do not have DNA or RNA. DNA and RNA are composed of nucleotides.
RNA nucleotides are similar to DNA nucleotides, but instead of thymine, RNA has uracil. So, the RNA nucleotides are: Adenine, uracil, guanine, cytosine.
Both, but RNA sometimes only has 1 side of unpaired nucleotides.
DNA polymerase III can add nucleotides only to a chain of nucleotides that is alreadypaired with the parent strands. Hence, DNA polymerasecannot link the first nucleotides in a newly synthesizedstrand. Instead, another enzyme, an RNA polymerasecalled primase, constructs an RNA primer, a sequence ofabout 10 RNA nucleotides complementary to the parentDNA template. DNA polymerase III recognizes the primerand adds DNA nucleotides to it to construct the new DNAstrands. The RNA nucleotides in the primers are then replacedby DNA nucleotides.
RNA polymerase
Nucleotides do not have DNA or RNA. DNA and RNA are composed of nucleotides.
DNA and RNA are composed of nucleotides.
RNA polymerase
RNA nucleotides are similar to DNA nucleotides, but instead of thymine, RNA has uracil. So, the RNA nucleotides are: Adenine, uracil, guanine, cytosine.
No, first of in total, both RNA and DNA combined have five nucleotides, DNA and RNA, both consists of three of the same nucleotides, and have one that varies between the two. Both DNA and RNA, have the nucleotides, guanine, cytosine and adenine, however DNA, has the additional nucleotide thymine and RNA instead of thymine has uracil. So, DNA's nucleotides are guanine, cytosine, adenine and thymine, while RNA's are guanine, cytosine, adenine and uracil. To specifically answer the question, no DNA consists of four different nucleotides and RNA consists of three of the same nucleotides, with one differing.
Both, but RNA sometimes only has 1 side of unpaired nucleotides.
nucleotides
Nucleotides
DNA, RNA, and Phosate.
DNA and RNA
Nucleotides
DNA polymerase III can add nucleotides only to a chain of nucleotides that is alreadypaired with the parent strands. Hence, DNA polymerasecannot link the first nucleotides in a newly synthesizedstrand. Instead, another enzyme, an RNA polymerasecalled primase, constructs an RNA primer, a sequence ofabout 10 RNA nucleotides complementary to the parentDNA template. DNA polymerase III recognizes the primerand adds DNA nucleotides to it to construct the new DNAstrands. The RNA nucleotides in the primers are then replacedby DNA nucleotides.