hydrogen
The phosphate group of a nucleotide contains phosphorus. It is attached to the sugar molecule in a nucleotide structure, along with a nitrogenous base.
No, sugar is not a component of a nucleotide. Nucleotides consist of a sugar molecule, a phosphate group, and a nitrogenous base.
A nucleotide is the subunit of DNA that consists of a nitrogenous base (adenine, cytosine, guanine, thymine), a sugar (deoxyribose), and a phosphate group. These nucleotides are the building blocks of DNA molecules.
The DNA nucleotide consists of three parts: a phosphate group, a 5-carbon sugar, and a nitrogenous base. The portion of the nucleotide that contains a negative charge is the phosphate group.
nucleotides that are the building blocks of nucleic acids are made up of sugar, a nitrogen base and phosphate group
A phosphodiester bond is formed between the hydroxyl group of one nucleotide and the phosphate group of an adjacent nucleotide when linking nucleotides to form the sugar-phosphate backbone of DNA. This bond involves the condensation reaction between the hydroxyl group of the 3' carbon of one nucleotide and the phosphate group of the 5' carbon of the adjacent nucleotide.
A nucleotide is composed of a Nitrogenous base, a phosphate, and a ribose sugar.
A DNA nucleotide is made up of a sugar(deoxyribose), a phosphate group and a nitrogenous base. The nitrogenous bases in DNA are guanine, cytosine, adenine, and thymine.
In a nucleotide the 5-carbon sugar is bonded to the phosphate group, which is bonded to the nitrogenous base. In a chain of nucleotides (a strand of DNA), the nucleotides are connected by covalent bonds between the sugar of one nucleotide, and the phosphate group of the next nucleotide.
5 carbon sugar, phosphate group, nitrogenous base
Sugar, nitrogenous base and phospsate
The phosphate is attached to the 5' carbon of the sugar in a nucleotide.