Phosphodiester bond connect the 3rd carbon of ribose to phosphate back bone
Covalent bonds that sugar as one of one nucleotide to the next bond is together done come together as a DNA strand. This is taught in science.
C5 is bound to that nucleotides own phophate group. C3 is bound to the phosphate group of the nucleotide before it by a covalant link creating a srong "backbone"
Nucleotides in both DNA and RNA are bound by phosphate ester bonds. See the following link for a detailed discussion: http://www.ncc.gmu.edu/dna/structur.htm
DNA polymerase join complementary DNA nucleotides together while DNA ligase joins together the gaps left behind from the okizoki fragments.
A hydrogen bond holds DNA together and a covalent holds rna together
Bond the Nucleotide together
Covalent bonds that sugar as one of one nucleotide to the next bond is together done come together as a DNA strand. This is taught in science.
C5 is bound to that nucleotides own phophate group. C3 is bound to the phosphate group of the nucleotide before it by a covalant link creating a srong "backbone"
hydrogen bonds
In producing a strand of DNA the nucleotides combine to form phosphodiester bonds.
The connection between nucleotides is between the sugar of the first nucleotide and the phosphate of the second. These are covalent bonds yielding a covalently attached sugar-phosphate backbone.
I think you mean a covalent bond. It is a shared pair of electrons which joins atoms together.
A covalent amide bond, specifically known as peptide bond.
peptide bond
glycosidic bond!!!
yes mostly but no because u must not forget the iron pills
peptide bond