Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) contains the 5-carbon sugar deoxyribose.
DDepends upon the kind of sugar, if it is a ribose then we can talk about the backbone of RNA, but if the sugar is a deoxyribose, then we have to talk about DNA backbone. In any case these three components are the basis of the nucleic acids.
Fresh lemon juice has citric acid and fructose.
No, although there is a sugar (pentose) in nucleic acids.
sugar and salt Sugar, salt
sugar has a neutral pH, so it doesn't really neutralize acids.
Ribose Sugar :)
small intesine
No, sugar is not a direct component of nucleic acids. Nucleic acids, which include DNA and RNA, are made up of nucleotides, which consist of a sugar molecule (deoxyribose in DNA and ribose in RNA), a phosphate group, and a nitrogenous base. Sugar is only a part of the nucleotide structure, not the nucleic acid itself.
Radium don't contain acids !
White sugar is the lightest kind of sugar.
No. Nucleic acids are formed by a sugar (ribose or deoxyribose), a phosphate group and nitrogen base (purines and pyrimidines).
no. nucleic acids have a ribose as its sugar. A ribose is a five carbon sugar. Lactose is a 6 carbon sugar and from this, we can say that it is not a ribose. Nucleic acids contain phosphorus but not potassium.