huba luba lu
No, RNA is the cells' chemical messenger that carries instructions from DNA in the nucleus to the rest of the cell about when to make proteins and which ones. DNA makes RNA however the process does involve some enzymes that are proteins
The enzyme that transcribes the DNA into RNA is called RNA polymerase.
RNA can move and DNA cant. DNA has a double helix strand and RNA is a single strand.
No. Unlike RNA, DNA is highly structured and much more stable. It has few chemical groups exposed that can participate in chemical equations. It's much less reactive than RNA eg. The lack of a 2' hydroxyl group on the deoxyribonucletide compared to the RNa's -OH in the ribose sugar.
DNA and RNA. Viruses that use RNA often have to have enzymes that convert the RNA to DNA.
its uracil
One of the major differences between DNA and RNA is the sugar, with 2-deoxyribose replaced by ribose in RNA. From ChaCha!
RNA links to worlds of DNA and proteins
Dna/rna
carbonhydrogennitrogenoxygen
An oxygen is missing from the DNA compared to the RNA -- so it has been de-oxygenated.
the chemical primase produces the rna primer to start DNA replication. the primase is later removed and replaced with DNA by a repair polymerase
a. RNA B. DNA C. PRO TINE D. CELLS
There are many chemicals.Some are many enzymes,DNA,RNA etc
No, RNA is the cells' chemical messenger that carries instructions from DNA in the nucleus to the rest of the cell about when to make proteins and which ones. DNA makes RNA however the process does involve some enzymes that are proteins
Deoxy-ribonucleic acid (DNA) and ribonucleic acid (RNA)
Polynucleotides is a chemical way to refering to DNA or RNA. The backbone of a DNA or RNA is an alternating sequence of sugars and phosphates. If the chain is DNA the sugar is deoxyribonucleic acid. If the chain if RNA, the sugar is ribonucleic acid.