Nitrogenous base, phosphate group, and RNA.
A DNA nucleotide contains a deoxyribose sugar molecule, a phosphate group, and a nitrogen base.
phrosphate and deoxyribose
Nucleotides do not have DNA or RNA. DNA and RNA are composed of nucleotides.
The Nucleotides form the ladder rungs.
nucleotides
If we put a comma in that sentence after DNA, the answer is yes, nucleotides are indeed the monomers of DNA. As written, the question makes no sense, since "DNA nucleotides" are not polymers and therefore do not have monomers.
No - genes are the parts of DNA that code for a functional product (such as a protein). There are other parts of the DNA which are not genes.
phrosphate and deoxyribose
Nucleotides do not have DNA or RNA. DNA and RNA are composed of nucleotides.
NUCLEOTIDES, look up bases for more specific answers
A DNA molecule is composed of long chains of DNA nucleotides.
The Nucleotides form the ladder rungs.
DNA and RNA are composed of nucleotides.
DNA polymerases are the enzymes responsible for joining DNA nucleotides together. In Prokaryotes - DNA Pol III is the enzyme which adds nucleotides to the new strand during DNA replication. DNA Pol I is responsible for replacing the primers with DNA nucleotides.
nucleotides- guanine, adenine, thymine, and cytosine
Nucleotides are molecules consists of three parts-a nitrogen base, a five-carbon sugar and a phosphate group. DNA and RNA are made of the subunits called nucleotides.
DNA nucleotides. Note that adenine, thymine, cytosine and guanine are NOT nucleotides, but they are only the bases which make the nucleotides different.
Nucleotides are the monomer units that make up a DNA molecule. DNA nucleotides are composed of a deoxyribose sugar, a nitrogenous base, and a phosphate group.