weak hydrogen bonds hold together sugars and phosphates
ionic bonds :)
A high-energy phosphoanhydride bond joins the phosphates of ATP. This bond stores a large amount of energy that can be released when broken through hydrolysis.
Ionic bonds hold sodium atoms together. Sodium atoms lose an electron to achieve a stable electron configuration, forming positively charged sodium ions. These ions are then attracted to negatively charged ions from other elements to form a bond.
A triple covalent bond holds the two nitrogen atoms together in a molecule of nitrogen gas (N2). Each nitrogen atom contributes three of its valence electrons to share with the other nitrogen atom, resulting in a very stable bond due to the multiple shared electrons.
The bond holding the diatomic molecule of hydrogen (which exists in hydrogen gas) is a single covalent bond. This is the sharing of one electron in their 1s orbital, forming an stable electron that of helium: 1s2
Phosphate backbone
A phosphodiester bond connects sugars (deoxyribose or ribose) and phosphates in nucleic acids like DNA and RNA. It forms between the 3' carbon of one sugar molecule and the 5' carbon of the adjacent sugar molecule, creating a sugar-phosphate backbone.
glycosidic bonds
its a scienfic bond that consist of hyper sugars that hold nucleic acids together.
A covalent bond
The polar covalent bond between the hydrogen and oxygen atoms holds it together.
chemical bond holds together the atoms in a substance
A Chemical Bond
Metallic bond
Covalent Bond .
The backbone of the DNA molecule is made up of alternating sugar (deoxyribose) and phosphate groups. These sugar-phosphate backbones run along the outside of the double helix structure, providing stability to the DNA molecule.
Covalent bond.