A deoxyribose sugar and phosphate groups.
The DNA molecule has two strands connected by a sugar phosphate backbone.
Sugar and phosphate are the parts that make up the DNA backbone.
Two strands of DNA are used to make complementary DNA during the process of DNA replication. This involves separating the two original DNA strands and using each as a template to build a new complementary strand.
The two strands of DNA are connected by hydrogen bonds.
Two strands of DNA are used to make complementary strands of DNA. One original strand serves as a template for the synthesis of a new strand, resulting in a double-stranded DNA molecule with base pairing between the original and newly synthesized strands.
DNA is made up of two strands.
The backbone of the DNA molecule is composed of alternating deoxyribose sugars and phosphate groups. The nitrogen bases are bonded to the sugar molecules. The two strands of DNA are held together by hydrogen bonds between the nitrogen bases of both strands.
Yes, the sugar and phosphate that make up the DNA backbone are joined together with covalent bonds. These bonds are stronger than the hydrogen bonds which join the bases from different strands together.
At the beginning of DNA replication there are two strands of DNA nucleotides.
This means the two strands of DNA are complementary.
a double helix- apex
Two new strands of DNA. <--- Gradpoint/NovaNet