DNA and RNA both have a sugar-phosphate backbone and nitrogenous bases.
The bases found in both DNA and RNA are Adenine, Guanine and Cytosine.
A phosphate group, a sugar, adenine, guanine, and cytosine.
DNA and RNA both have a sugar-phosphate backbone and nitrogenous bases.
The bases found in both DNA and RNA are Adenine, Guanine and Cytosine.
DNA and RNA both have a sugar-phosphate backbone and nitrogenous bases. The bases found in both DNA and RNA are Adenine, Guanine and Cytosine.
In prokaryotic cells, DNA and RNA are both found in the cytoplasm. In eukaryotic cells, DNA is typically restricted to the nucleus and RNA is mostly in the cytoplasm.
Uracil is found in RNA but not in DNA.
Thymine
This is found both in DNA and Rna.
Floating in the Cytoplasm.
There are many are found. Both DNA and RNA also found
RNA primers.
Deoxyribose is the sugar found in DNA. Ribose is the sugar found in RNA.
A nitrogenous base that is found in RNA but not DNA is uracil.
Thymine is found in DNA but not in RNA. Uracil replaces thymine in RNA. In other words: DNA has thymine. RNA has uracil.
Cells in living organisms, including bacteria, contain DNA.