The only sugar found in DNA is deoxyribose. DNA means deoxyribonucleic acid. The only sugar found in RNA is ribose. RNA means ribonucleic acid.
deoxyribose
The sugar in DNA is deoxyribose - hence the name deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA).
The sugar found in DNA is called two-prime [2'] deoxyribose. The sugar found in Rna is called ribose.
Deoxyribose, C5H10O4. The sugar in RNA, ribose, has the chemical formula C5H10O5.
I'm almost certain the answer is ribose and dioxiribose
In DNA, the sugar found is 2-deoxyribose. In RNA, the sugar found is ribose. Both are 5-carbon sugars. The only difference between them is that the first mentioned above has one oxygen atom less than ribose sugar, at the position 2'.
The sugar found in DNA is deoxyribose, while the sugar found in RNA is ribose. The main structural difference between these two sugars is the presence of an extra hydroxyl group in ribose that is absent in deoxyribose.
no. in reality there are actually two sugars.
In DNA, sugars refer to the deoxyribose molecules that make up the backbone of the DNA double helix. These sugars are linked together by phosphate groups, forming the sugar-phosphate backbone of the DNA molecule.
Ribose is not found in DNA as it stands for Deoxyribonucleic Acid, so the deoxygenated form of ribose is found in the molecule. Ribose sugars can form RNA or ribonucleic acid. The deoxyribose sugars (along with phosphate groups) form the "backbone" of the DNA helix, each deoxyribose (or pentose sugar {pentose=5 carbons}) is bonded to one base each (A/T/G/C)
Phosphates and sugars.
DNA contains deoxyribose sugar and it helps in transferring genes .