Both DNA and RNA have all three.
The three components that make up the nucleotides of RNA are the nucleobases, the ribose sugars, and the phosphate backbone. The nucleobases are what give RNA its variability, denoted by the letters A, C, G and U. They form the "alphabet" that gets translated into the different amino acids that make up proteins. The ribose sugars and the phosphate together form the linkages in the chain of nucleotides holding the nucleobases together.
The three parts of a nucleotide is the deoxyribose, the nitrogen base, and the phosphate group.
The subunit structure of a nucleic acid is nucleotides. Nucleotides are made out of a sugars, nitrogen base and a phosphate.
phosphodiesterbonds
The DNA backbone, are made of alternating sugars and phosphate groups.
DNA is made up of pentose sugar called also deoxyriboseaswell as nitrogen base and phosphate backbone.
The DNA backbone, are made of alternating sugars and phosphate groups.
The three components of DNA are phosphate, deoxyribose sugar, and nitrogen base. A DNA strand looks like a ladder. The "sides" of the ladder are made up by the phosphates and deoxyribose sugars the "steps" are the nitrogen bases.
Yes, you are correct. DNA is made up of a base (adenine, thymine, cytosine and guanine), a phosphate and a deoxyribose Sugar. The phosphate and the sugar form the backbone while the bases form the links in between
PO43- (phosphate) is the conjugate base of HPO42- (monohydrogen phosphate)
The question doesn't make a lot of sense. All DNA is composed of sugars, phophates, and nitrogen bases.
Deoxyribose sugar alternates with phosphate to make up the sides of the DNA molecule. This forms the backbone of the DNA structure, with the phosphate group linking the sugar molecules together through phosphodiester bonds.