3 phosphate groups, 1 ribose, and 1 adenine
ATP stands for Adenosine TriPhosphate.
It comprises of a nitrogenous base (adenine), a sugar (ribose) and three phosphate groups.
It is a ribose sugar.
A pentose sugar.
It is a ribose sugar.
It is true, RNA nucleotides contain the five-carbon sugar ribose.
The sugar that is part of a nucleotide is a 5-carbon atom sugar in its ring form. It will either be ribose in RNA or deoxyribose in DNA. The "deoxy" simply means that the ribose molecule has lost an oxygen. That missing oxygen happens to be from the second carbon, so the more correct name for deoxyribose is 2-deoxyribose.
The ATP molecule is composed of three components. At the centre is a sugar molecule, ribose (the same sugar that forms the basis of RNA). Attached to one side of this is a base (a group consisting of linked rings of carbon and nitrogen atoms); in this case the base is adenine. The other side of the sugar is attached to a string of phosphate groups. These phosphates are the key to the activity of ATP.
There is a monosaccharide called pentose that has five carbon atoms. There is another one in DNA with five carbon atoms called deoxyribose and one in RNA called ribose.
A nucleotide consists of three components: 1. A 5-carbon sugar (deoxyribose for DNA or ribose for RNA) 2. A nitrogenous base (adenine, cytosine guanine and thymine (or uracil in RNA) 3. A phosphate group
It is a ribose sugar.
It is a ribose sugar.
The sugar that is found in DNA is called Deoxyribose
The sugar in DNA is Deoxyribose (Nucleic Acid). It is a type of 5 carbon sugar, ribose.
It is true, RNA nucleotides contain the five-carbon sugar ribose.
The five prime and three prime refer to bonds in the DNA molecule. The sugar binds to another sugar in the chain at the number three carbon and the number 5 carbon, which is at an extension from the carbon ring, binds to the phosphate backbone. In one continuous chain.
nitrogen containing base, 3 phosphate groups and 5 carbon sugar
The sugar that is part of a nucleotide is a 5-carbon atom sugar in its ring form. It will either be ribose in RNA or deoxyribose in DNA. The "deoxy" simply means that the ribose molecule has lost an oxygen. That missing oxygen happens to be from the second carbon, so the more correct name for deoxyribose is 2-deoxyribose.
The ATP molecule is composed of three components. At the centre is a sugar molecule, ribose (the same sugar that forms the basis of RNA). Attached to one side of this is a base (a group consisting of linked rings of carbon and nitrogen atoms); in this case the base is adenine. The other side of the sugar is attached to a string of phosphate groups. These phosphates are the key to the activity of ATP.
Sugars and PhosphatesA sugar (deoxyribose, a sugar with, among other elements, 5 carbon atoms) and phosphates to bond them together.
5 moles carbon? 5 grams carbon? Both done. 5 moles carbon (6.022 X 1023/1 mole C) = 3.0 X 1024 atoms carbon =================== 5 grams carbon (1 mole C/12.01 grams)(6.022 X 1023/1 mole C) = 2.5 X 1023 atoms carbon ==================== your choice
There is a monosaccharide called pentose that has five carbon atoms. There is another one in DNA with five carbon atoms called deoxyribose and one in RNA called ribose.