There is no difference between the sugar-phosphate arrangement in the backbone of the DNA from the plant, mammal, and bacterium. What makes plant, mammal, and bacterium different is the sequence of the DNA nucleotides.
The sugar-phosphate backbone of DNA is made up of deoxyribose (a sugar) and phosphate.
The sugar-phosphate supporting structure of the DNA double helix is called the backbone. This is why the DNA is commonly referred to as a double helix.
Phosphate and Deoxyribose sugar are the two parts that form the backbone of DNA. They are joined by ester bonds.
The backbone of DNA is made up of deoxyribose, a sugar, and are linked together by phosphodiester bonds. RNA is similar but the sugar is called ribose.
The DNA backbone, are made of alternating sugars and phosphate groups.
Yes, sugar deoxyribose and a phosphate group forms the backbone in the DNA.
The sequence of subunits in the DNA backbone is phosphate, sugar, phosphate, sugar, phosphate, and sugar. The coding region is the code for protein sequence.
I believe not. I think it is a sugar phosphate backbone.
Phosphate is a molecule found in the backbone of DNA and RNA
The sugar-phosphate backbone of DNA is made up of deoxyribose (a sugar) and phosphate.
Phosphate backbone
The DNA backbone, are made of alternating sugars and phosphate groups.
Yes it does
The sugar-phosphate supporting structure of the DNA double helix is called the backbone. This is why the DNA is commonly referred to as a double helix.
Phosphate and Deoxyribose sugar are the two parts that form the backbone of DNA. They are joined by ester bonds.
A ribose sugar linked by phosphate groups.
Yes,they bond to phosphate group.They make up the backbone of DNA.