A nucleotide
A nucleotide
A nucleotide
Glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate, also known as triose phosphate or G3P, is an organic compound. It occurs as an intermediate in several central metabolic pathways of all organisms.
Ribose sugar, Phosphate and Nitrogen bases
elements
This kind of sounds like the same thing. Both are correct depending on how you look at it. If your're talking about how it occurs biochemically then the base is attached to the sugar and phosphate.
The end product of the Calvin cycle is a three-carbon sugar molecule called glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate (G3P). This molecule can be used to produce glucose and other carbohydrates, which serve as a source of energy for the plant.
The sugar molecule - glucose - is made in the chloroplasts of photosynthetic plants.
Sugar is an example of a carbohydrate molecule, vegetable oil is an example of a lipid molecule, and alcohol is an example of an organic compound molecule.
That depends on what kind of sugar you're talking about. Table sugar, or sucrose, has the formula C12H22O11. One molecule of sucrose has 22 hydrogen atoms. Blood sugar, or glucose, has the formula C6H12O6. One molecule of glucose has 12 hydrogen atoms. Other types of sugar have different formulas. If you know the chemical formula, look at the subscript to the right of the H to see how many hydrogen atoms are in one molecule of sugar.
The formation of ADP and inorganic phosphate from ATP and water is an example of a hydrolysis reaction. In this reaction, a water molecule is used to break the bond between the phosphate group and ATP, resulting in the formation of ADP and inorganic phosphate.
a kind of mutation called deletion or insertion