five-carbon sugar group, phosphate group, and a nitrogenous base
Three
From largest to smallest, nucleic acid structures are organized as follows: chromosome, chromatin, DNA double helix, DNA strand, gene, and nucleotide.
Nucleotides are the 'rung' or 'dowel-like' structures that hold the DNA strand together. Nucleotides consist of Purines (adenine and Guanine) and Pyrimidines (Thymine and Cytosine) {{ A to T....G to C}} A neucleotide is an organic compound that is made up of three joined structures. see also site presenting Visualization invented in 2015 by Polish scientist Gregory Podgorniak: studia.scienceontheweb.net/visualization.php
A nucleotide is made of a nitrogen base, a five carbon sugar and one to three phosphate groups.
The DNA nucleotide consists of three parts: a phosphate group, a 5-carbon sugar, and a nitrogenous base. The portion of the nucleotide that contains a negative charge is the phosphate group.
The three parts of a nucleotide is the deoxyribose, the nitrogen base, and the phosphate group.
The nucleotides are joined together by phosphodiester linkages between the sugar of one nucleotide and the phosphate of the next.
There are three nucleotide Bases for each codon, so the Answer is 72 bases.
They are there to make up the DNA structures. they do this by being compleatly epic.
The three parts of a nucleotide is the deoxyribose, the nitrogen base, and the phosphate group.
From largest to smallest, nucleic acid structures are organized as follows: chromosome, chromatin, DNA double helix, DNA strand, gene, and nucleotide.
Three
The monomers of DNA are called nucleotides, each nucleotide has three parts:PHOSPHATESUGAR ( Deoxyribose)NITROGEN BASE
Do you mean "nucleotide"? Nucleotides are molecules that, when joined together, make up the structural units of RNA and DNA.
No, nucleotides are joined together by the formation of phosphodiester bonds between the phosphate group of one nucleotide and the sugar molecule of another nucleotide. The bases participate in hydrogen bonding interactions, not covalent bonding, within the DNA double helix structure.
Have single chain ends with complementary nucleotide sequences
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