Phosphate and Deoxyribose sugar are the two parts that form the backbone of DNA. They are joined by ester bonds.
The phosphate groups and ribose (5 carbon sugar) for the Sugar-Phosphate backbone in DNA
Deoxyribose sugar and phosphate
deoxyribose and a phosphate group
The backbone of DNA is formed by linked alternating phosphate groups and deoxyribose sugars.
The three parts that make up DNA is the nitrogenous base, deoxyribose sugar and phosphate group. DNA carries the genetic information in all living organisms.
Human bone contains nucleated cells, osteocytes, which are inside the collagen fibers and contain DNA.
Sort of... Assuming there is no GVHD and the bone marrow transplant is successful, a blood test will show what percent of the recipient's blood is their own blood and what percent of the recipient's blood was produced from the donor's bone marrow. If the test comes back ">95%", then the recipient's blood and the donor's blood have become DNA-identical. Interestingly enough, the recipient's hair and saliva remain the same DNA they were born with. Their hair and saliva do NOT change to the donor's DNA. So, the recipient of the bone marrow transplant would then have two DNA's in their body. Neat stuff!
The three parts that make up nucleotides are a phosphate molecule, a 5-carbon ribose sugar and a nitrogenous base. DNA and RNA make up nucleotide chains.
plasma
Deoxyribose sugars and phosphates make up the backbone of DNA.
Deoxyribose sugars and phosphates make up the backbone of DNA.
The sugar-phoshate part is what makes up the backbone, ribose in RNA and 2-Deoxyribose in DNA with a single phosphate group per nucleotide.
Mitochondria and chloroplast make up the DNA
The backbone of DNA is formed by linked alternating phosphate groups and deoxyribose sugars.
such as blood, semen, or bone
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The backbone of DNA is formed by linked alternating phosphate groups and deoxyribose sugars.
no because the DNA doesn't make up what your bone structure will look like it just means they inherited it from there ancestors.
The three parts that make up DNA is the nitrogenous base, deoxyribose sugar and phosphate group. DNA carries the genetic information in all living organisms.
The three parts that make up DNA is the nitrogenous base, deoxyribose sugar and phosphate group. DNA carries the genetic information in all living organisms.