deoxyribose
deoxyribose is present in the backbone of DNA, hence DNA's name: deoxyribonucleic acid.
The sugar found in the backbone of DNA is the deoxyribose.
The sugar component in DNA is deoxyribose, hence the name deoxyribonucleic acid. This sugar molecule forms the backbone of the DNA double helix structure.
The sugar-phosphate supporting structure of the DNA double helix is called the backbone. This is why the DNA is commonly referred to as a double helix.
The part of the DNA backbone that does not contain phosphorus is the deoxyribose sugar. It is the sugar molecule that forms the backbone of the DNA strand and is connected to the nitrogenous bases. The phosphate group is the component that connects the sugar molecules, forming the backbone of the DNA.
I believe not. I think it is a sugar phosphate backbone.
The sugar that is found in DNA is called Deoxyribose
Deoxyribose sugar, it is a pentose sugar base.
The sugar found in the backbone of DNA is the deoxyribose.
The outside of the DNA ladder is made up of a sugar-phosphate backbone. The sugar in DNA is deoxyribose, which alternates with phosphate groups to form the backbone. The nitrogenous bases are attached to this sugar-phosphate backbone on the inside of the ladder.
The backbone of a DNA chain is sugar and phosphate groups of each nucleotide.
The uprights [backbone] of Dna is also known as its 'sugar-phosphate-backbone' - the sugar portion is the five-cyclic-carbon sugar Ribose.