A pentose sugar (ribose or deoxyribose), a phosphate group, and a nitrogenous base (adenine, thymine, guanine, cytosine, or uracil).
Each nucleotide has a nitrogenous base (purines or pyrimides), a ribose sugar, and a phosphate moiety.
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nucleotide, gene, chromosome, gamete
The part of a nucleotide that can be removed without breaking the chain is the thymine for DNA and the uracil for RNA. These two components are the nucleobases of a nucleotide.
No. Deoxyribose is the sugar in a DNA nucleotide. A DNA nucleotide would also include a phosphate group and a nitrogen base.
DNA nucleotides consist of a phosphate, a deoxyribose (sugar), and a nitrogen base: adenine, guanine, cytosine, thymine.
A Nucleotide are molecules that when combined make the structural units of DNA and RNA. An actual nucleotide is made up of small components. These components are; Phosphates Sugar Heterocyclic Base
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nucleotide, gene, chromosome, gamete
A nucleotide is made of a nitrogen base, a five carbon sugar and one to three phosphate groups.
There are several basic components of ATP. They include a base, ribose, nucleotide, as well as the inclusion of three phosphates.
The three components of a nucleotide are: 1-a five cornered sugar 2-nitrogenous base 3-phosphate group
1. Phosphate 2. Sugar 3. Nitrogenous bases
deoxyribose, a phosphate and one of the bases: adenine, cytosine, guanine or thymine
The part of a nucleotide that can be removed without breaking the chain is the thymine for DNA and the uracil for RNA. These two components are the nucleobases of a nucleotide.
The three components that create a DNA nucleotide are a phosphate group, a nitrogenous base [this will be either Adenine, Guanine, Cytosine, or Thymine], and a Sugar [deoxyribose, which is how we get the D in DNA].
The nitrogenous base is what causes variation from one nucleotide to another in DNA. The deoxyribose and phosphate group are the same on all nucleotides.
a five-carbon sugar, a phosphate group, and a nitrogenous base