This is false!! The correct answer is RNA
DNA contains deoxyribose sugar and it helps in transferring genes .
No. Sugars are composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, but not nitrogen.
It is neither. Sugars are substances whose chemical names have the suffix -ose: glucose, sucrose, maltose, fructose, lactose, galactose, riboses,. Rnas and Dnas are nucleotides.
The sugar in DNA is deoxyribose - hence the name deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA).
The DNA backbone, are made of alternating sugars and phosphate groups.
DNA contains deoxyribose sugar and it helps in transferring genes .
The kind of sugars that nucleotides contain is the five carbon ring structure.
DNA is the result of the y and x chromosome combining in the womb. DNA can be taken from anywhere to determine the 3 trillion letters that make up who you are. So unless the part of the body that the DNA sample is taken from produces sugars, then no, DNA does not contain sugar.
Yes, DNA is made of hydrogen, oxygen, carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus.
Pentose sugars are sugars that contain 5 carbon atoms. Two most common examples are ribose (RNA component) and deoxyribose (DNA component)Also arabinos,xyluse,ribulose
no. in reality there are actually two sugars.
Nucleic acids do contain sugars, in the form of ribose or deoxyribose in DNA and RNA molecules. Lipids are not typically found in nucleic acids but are essential components of cell membranes.
In DNA, sugars refer to the deoxyribose molecules that make up the backbone of the DNA double helix. These sugars are linked together by phosphate groups, forming the sugar-phosphate backbone of the DNA molecule.
Phosphates and sugars.
No, DNA does not contain potassium.
DNA is composed of deoxy ribose nucleotide (containing deoxy ribose sugars). Deoxy ribose sugar lacks an OH group at the 2' position RNA is composed of ribose nucleotides (containing ribose sugar)
No. Sugars are composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, but not nitrogen.