The small units are called nucleotides, and they consist of three parts:
a phosphate group
deoxyribose
and a nitrogen containing base
Thymine
Nucleic acids (DNA and RNA)
Thymine is a base found in DNA but not in RNA. In RNA, thymine is replaced by uracil.
They are considered polymers. The monomers of nucleic acids (DNA and RNA) are nucleotides. Each nucleotide has a phosphate, a sugar and a nitrogenous base.
Uracil is not naturally present in DNA. Instead, it is found in RNA, where it replaces the thymine base found in DNA. Thymine is the corresponding base in DNA and is not found in RNA.
RNA has the base uracil that DNA does not have.
RNA has the base uracil that DNA does not have.
RNA has the base uracil which replaces the thymine base of DNA.
RNA has the base uracil which replaces the thymine base of DNA.
An uracil base is in RNA but not in DNA
Thymine
uracil is in rna not in DNA
Nucleic acids (DNA and RNA)
Uracil is in RNA and Thyramine is in DNA, the other nitrogen bases are the same In RNA Adenine is complementary to Uracil and Guanine is complementary to cytocine In DNA Adenine is complementarty to Tyramine and Guanine is complentary to cytocine
In DNA thymine is one of the nitrogen bases, but in RNA uracil replaces thymine still leaving four nitrogen bases
Thymine is a base found in DNA but not in RNA. In RNA, thymine is replaced by uracil.
Uracil is the nitrogen base found in RNA but not in DNA. It replaces thymine, which is found in DNA and not in RNA. Uracil forms base pairs with adenine in RNA during transcription and translation processes.