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The Sides of this ladder equate to the Dna's Sugar-Phosphate Backbone; the Rungs of this ladder equate to the Hydrogen-bonding that takes place between base pairs.
The rungs are perpendicular to both sides
There are 4 nucleotides that make up the ladder: adenine and thymine, cytosine and guanine. There is a double bond between A and T, and a triple bond between C and G. The two substances that make up the SIDES of the ladder are sugar and phosphate, known as a sugar-phosphate strand.
There are four bases in a DNA "ladder"... It is called a ladder because of the "two sides" and the bases... In DNA replication, they obviously replicate and the two sides are replicated as are the bases. (A,T,C,G)
suger and a phosphate;)
because lever is a part of simple machine that makes a ladder have a screw between the both sides of ladder.
circles have no sides or angles
The Sides of this ladder equate to the Dna's Sugar-Phosphate Backbone; the Rungs of this ladder equate to the Hydrogen-bonding that takes place between base pairs.
The rungs on a ladder are held between the rails.
That circles have no sides
what holds the sides of the DNA ladder together
Phosphate and sugar make up the sides of a DNA ladder.
The sides of the DNA ladder are composed of alternating Phosphate and deoxyribose (sugar) molecules.
circles dont have sides
The rungs are perpendicular to both sides
Yes. Both circles and ovals have no sides.
Phosphates and Sugars formthe sides of the DNA ladder~