The nitrogenous bases. I think.
DNA is made up of nucleotide bases bonded to a sugar-phosphate backbone. This backbone consists of alternating sugar and phosphate molecules, with the nucleotide bases (adenine, thymine, cytosine, and guanine) attached to the sugar molecules.
The two components that make up the nucleotide backbone are the sugar molecule, which is either ribose in RNA or deoxyribose in DNA, and the phosphate group. Together, they form the repeating structure that provides the backbone for the nucleic acid strand.
Pairs of sugars
Nucleic acids are made up of monomers called nucleotides, which consist of; a sugar, a phosphate part and an N-containing base.
dna strands
Pentose sugars and Phosphate groups
Pentose sugars and Phosphate groups
The sugar-phoshate part is what makes up the backbone, ribose in RNA and 2-Deoxyribose in DNA with a single phosphate group per nucleotide.
Pentose sugars and Phosphate groups
DNA is made up of nucleotide bases bonded to a sugar-phosphate backbone. This backbone consists of alternating sugar and phosphate molecules, with the nucleotide bases (adenine, thymine, cytosine, and guanine) attached to the sugar molecules.
The sugar deoxyribose is a component of a DNA nucleotide.
The sugar-phoshate part is what makes up the backbone, ribose in RNA and 2-Deoxyribose in DNA with a single phosphate group per nucleotide.
The sugar-phoshate part is what makes up the backbone, ribose in RNA and 2-Deoxyribose in DNA with a single phosphate group per nucleotide.
Yes, ribose is present in DNA as part of the sugar-phosphate backbone of the nucleotide molecules that make up the DNA structure.
The two components that make up the nucleotide backbone are the sugar molecule, which is either ribose in RNA or deoxyribose in DNA, and the phosphate group. Together, they form the repeating structure that provides the backbone for the nucleic acid strand.
Pairs of sugars