peptide bonds
DNA and RNA are composed of many nucleotides joined together in a specific sequence.
Genes are segments of DNA. DNA is made up of polymer of nucleotides joined together. When there is an alteration in the sequence of nucleotides, gene mutation occurs.
tha answer to this question is nucleotides (^-^) (><) (o*0) ($-%) o-/-%
tha answer to this question is nucleotides (^-^) (><) (o*0) ($-%) o-/-%
Nucleotides are molecules that, when joined together, make up the structural units of RNA and DNA.
DNA Polymerase III adds nucleotides during DNA replication. DNA Polymerase I also adds nucleotides (to a lesser extent). DNA Pol I is responsible for replacing the primers with dNTPs, these sections are then joined to the rest by DNA Ligase.
Do you mean "nucleotide"? Nucleotides are molecules that, when joined together, make up the structural units of RNA and DNA.
DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) is a double stranded polynucleotide. It is made of two anti-parallel strands of many individual units called nucleotides joined together. The nucleotides themselves consist of a phosphate group, a pentose sugar (in the nucleotides of DNA the pentose sugar present is deoxyribose) and a nitrogenous base (in the nucleotides of DNA the bases are adenine, thymine, guanine and cytosine).
The monomers of DNA are called nucleotides, and the polymer is a polynucleotide.There are four different nucleotides in DNA called A, T, G, and C for the nitrogenous base sidegroup (adenine, thymine, guanine, and cytosine respectively) attached to the sugar-phosphate backbone (deoxyribose-phosphate) of a nucleotide. These nucleotides can be joined in any order, permitting the "spelling" of an unlimited number of different genetic "words".
The base of the nucleotides
DNA Polymerase III is responsible for adding new nucleotides to the strand being created. DNA Polymerase I replaces the primers with DNA nucleotides. The fragments are then joined together by ligase, and a new strand has been created.
A DNA molecule is composed of long chains of DNA nucleotides.