Sugars and Phosphates
A sugar (deoxyribose, a sugar with, among other elements, 5 carbon atoms) and phosphates to bond them together.
The backbone is composed of dexyribose sugar and a phosphate group.
A sugar (deoxyribose, a sugar with, among other elements, 5 carbon atoms) and phosphates to bond them together.
Chain of nucleotides and phosphates
The sugar phosphate backbone.
Phosphates and sugars.
Yes,they bond to phosphate group.They make up the backbone of DNA.
Nitrogenous base
true
Deoxyribose sugars and phosphates make up the backbone of DNA.
The sugar found in the backbone of DNA is the deoxyribose.
The backbone of the DNA molecule consists of a sugar, deoxyribose and a phosphate group. --(sugars and phosphates)
dna strands
The DNA backbone, are made of alternating sugars and phosphate groups.
What components make up the backbone of DNA
deoxyiribose.
Phosphate and sugar molecules
The backbone of the DNA molecule is made up of a sugar (deoxyribose) bonded to a phosphate group bonded to another sugar and then another phosphate and so on. These are very strong covalent bonds that are not easily broken.
The backbone of a DNA chain is sugar and phosphate groups of each nucleotide.
The rungs that are in the DNA ladder molecule are nucleotides. They are adenine, guanine, thymine and cytosine. Deoxyribose and phosphate make up the backbone of the molecule.
Alternating deoxyribose and phosphate molecules