The sugar deoxyribose is part of the DNA.
In DNA the five-carbon sugar is deoxyribose. In RNA the five-carbon sugar is ribose.
Deoxyribose
The sugar used in the DNA ladder is deoxyribose. It is a five-carbon sugar that forms part of the DNA backbone and is essential for the stability and structure of the DNA molecule.
The sugar found in DNA, deoxyribose, is a five-carbon sugar with a five-sided ring in the shape of a pentagon.
In DNA, the sugar is deoxyribose. In RNA, it is ribose.
Deoxyribose
Deoxyribose. A+
a phosphate group, a five-carbon sugar molecule, and a nitrogen baseAnd the five-carbon sugar is deoxyribose, which gives DNA its name of deoxyribonucleic acid.
The backbone of DNA is made of a five-carbon sugar (deoxyribose) and phosphate.
It is true, RNA nucleotides contain the five-carbon sugar ribose.
No, DNA is composed of: deoxyribose sugar phosphate backbone nucleotide
The uprights [backbone] of Dna is also known as its 'sugar-phosphate-backbone' - the sugar portion is the five-cyclic-carbon sugar Ribose.