Nucleotide molecules connect with each other in phosphate. Nucleotides are composed of three parts: phosphate, deoxyribose and the nitrogen base.
Nucleotide molecules connect with each other in phosphate. Nucleotides are composed of three parts: phosphate, deoxyribose and the nitrogen base.
Nucleotides in DNA connect with each other at the phosphate group of one nucleotide and the sugar of the next nucleotide, forming a covalent bond known as a phosphodiester bond. This linkage creates the sugar-phosphate backbone of the DNA strand. Additionally, the nitrogenous bases of the nucleotides pair with complementary bases on the opposite strand through hydrogen bonds, contributing to the double helix structure.
Nucleotide molecules are connected to each other through phosphodiester bonds between the sugar of one nucleotide and the phosphate group of another nucleotide. These bonds form the sugar-phosphate backbone of nucleic acids like DNA and RNA. The sequence of nucleotides in the backbone encodes genetic information.
When two nucleotides are joined together, the resulting structure is called a dinucleotide.
they use the same set of nucleotides.
they use the same set of nucleotides.
they use the same set of nucleotides.
Base Pairing Rules
they use the same set of nucleotides.
they use the same set of nucleotides.
A three-nucleotide sequence makes up a codon.
Codons are sequences of three nucleotides that connect the double stranded helix of DNA which are described as "ladder rungs" and they each call for a specific amino acid.