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sugars and phosphates
The sugar-phosphate backbone has the phosphates as the backbone with the ribose sugars as the attachments (connections) to the [C or G or A or T] nucleotides.
The DNA backbone, are made of alternating sugars and phosphate groups.
Polynucleotides is a chemical way to refering to DNA or RNA. The backbone of a DNA or RNA is an alternating sequence of sugars and phosphates. If the chain is DNA the sugar is deoxyribonucleic acid. If the chain if RNA, the sugar is ribonucleic acid.
The backbone of the DNA strand (referred to as phosphate-deoxyribose backbone) is made of alternating phosphate and sugar residues (2'-deoxyribose). The sugars are joined together by phosphate groups via phosphodiester bonds between adjacent sugar rings. The double helix is stabilized by hydrogen bonds between the bases attached to the two strands. A base attached to a sugar residue, which in turn attached to a phosphate group is referred to as a nucleotide.
All marcomolecules (including nucleic acids) have a backbone of carbon.
Phosphates and sugars.
Phosphates and sugars.
sugars and phosphates
DNA two backbone chains of phosphates and deoxyribose sugars.
phosphates
The sugar-phosphate backbone has the phosphates as the backbone with the ribose sugars as the attachments (connections) to the [C or G or A or T] nucleotides.
The backbone of the DNA molecule consists of a sugar, deoxyribose and a phosphate group. --(sugars and phosphates)
Like DNA, the backbone of RNA consists of a sugar molecule and a phosphate group; the difference is that in RNA the sugar is ribose, whereas in DNA it's deoxyribose.
Deoxyribose sugars and phosphates make up the backbone of DNA.
Deoxyribose sugars and phosphates make up the backbone of DNA.
The DNA backbone, are made of alternating sugars and phosphate groups.