DNA is deoxyribonucleic acid why DNA is called acid but it contains nitrogenous base.
DNA is acidic in nature because it contains phosphate groups in its backbone. These phosphate groups have a negative charge, making DNA an acidic molecule. The presence of acidic phosphate groups allows DNA to easily interact with positively charged molecules during processes like DNA replication and protein synthesis.
Deoxyribose (the chain of alternating sugar/phosphate links)
It's called euchromatin, and is attached to histones.
Purines, Pryimidine and Nucleotide are the subunits of DNA.
DNA replication is a semi-conservative process. The DNA is split into two strands. Nucleotides are then attached to each strand by complementary base pairing, where A attaches to T and G attaches to C. The newly formed strand is hence identical to the old strand and the base sequence of DNA can hence be conserved during replication.
A sugar phosphate group called deoxyribose attached to a nitrogenous base.
The nucleotide to which the nitrogen base is attached in DNA is the sugar molecule, specifically the deoxyribose sugar. The nitrogen base is attached to the 1' carbon of the deoxyribose sugar through a glycosidic bond.
DNA is acidic in nature because it contains phosphate groups in its backbone. These phosphate groups have a negative charge, making DNA an acidic molecule. The presence of acidic phosphate groups allows DNA to easily interact with positively charged molecules during processes like DNA replication and protein synthesis.
Okazaki fragments.
The region of a nucleotide to which the nitrogen base is attached in DNA is the sugar molecule, specifically the deoxyribose sugar. The nitrogen base is connected to the 1' carbon of the deoxyribose sugar in the nucleotide structure.
Deoxyribose (the chain of alternating sugar/phosphate links)
A change in the nucleotide sequence of DNA is called a mutation.
A change in the nucleotide sequence of DNA is called a mutation.
A nucleotide consists of three components: 1. A 5-carbon sugar (deoxyribose for DNA or ribose for RNA) 2. A nitrogenous base (adenine, cytosine guanine and thymine (or uracil in RNA) 3. A phosphate group
It's called euchromatin, and is attached to histones.
A change in gene level at DNA level can be characterized into two different categories. The first is called a base substitution and the second is called a base addition.
The sugar-phosphate supporting structure of the DNA double helix is called the backbone. This is why the DNA is commonly referred to as a double helix.