The three subunits that make up a nucleotide are:
The phosphate group is part of the nucleotide. Pentose sugar and Nitrogenous base is part of the parts that make up the nucleotide.
The phosphate group is part of the nucleotide. Pentose sugar and Nitrogenous base is part of the parts that make up the nucleotide.
DNA and RNA are polymers. Collectively, DNA and RNA are called nucleic acids. The subunits of nucleic acids are called nucleotides. Nucleotide monomers form nucleic acid polymers. A nucleotide has 3 parts to it: a phosphate group, a sugar (ribose in RNA and deoxyribose in DNA), and a base (Adenine, Guanine, Cytosine, Thymine or Uracil - Thymine is found only in DNA and Uracil is found only in RNA, but the other 3 bases may be found in either.) Another name for it would be nitrogenous base.
3 bases make up an anti-codon, 3 bases also make up a codon
adenine, thymine, guanine, cytosine, uracil
The phosphate group is part of the nucleotide. Pentose sugar and Nitrogenous base is part of the parts that make up the nucleotide.
The phosphate group is part of the nucleotide. Pentose sugar and Nitrogenous base is part of the parts that make up the nucleotide.
DNA is the only polymer in that list. The other 3 options are all individual subunits that could be made into a polymer. Amino acids are the monomers (individual subunits) that up DNA and RNA
A nucleotide consists of three subunits: a phosphate group, a sugar molecule (deoxyribose in DNA and ribose in RNA), and a nitrogenous base (adenine, thymine, cytosine, guanine in DNA; adenine, uracil, cytosine, guanine in RNA).
The nitrogenous base can differ from one nucleotide to another. It can be adenine, guanine, cytosine, or thymine (in DNA) or uracil (in RNA). The sugar and phosphate components remain the same in all nucleotides.
Monomers are the subunits that make up polymers. Monomers link together through chemical reactions called polymerization to form long chains of repeating units that make up polymers.
A nucleotide consists of three main parts: 1. a sugar, (ribose for RNA nucleotides and deoxyribose for DNA nucleotides), 2. a phosphate, and 3. a nitrogenous base. For DNA they are adenine, thymine, cytosine, guanine for DNA. For RNA the bases are the same except uricil replaces thymine.
A nucleotide is made of three components: a phosphate group, a sugar molecule (such as ribose or deoxyribose), and a nitrogenous base (such as adenine, cytosine, guanine, or thymine). These components form the building blocks of DNA and RNA molecules.
1) five carbon sugar aka deoxyribose 2) phosphate group 3) nitrogen base [adenine (A), thymine (T), cytosine (C), guanine (G)]
The phosphate group of the incoming nucleotide joins the 3'-hydroxyl group of the last nucleotide in the growing DNA chain to form a phosphodiester bond.
Subunits of fats are glycerol and fatty acids. Each fat molecule comprises of 1 molecule of glycerol and 3 molecules of fatty acids.
1:A nitrogenous Base purine or pyrimidine; 2 : A pentose sugar ribose or deoxyribose ; 3: ortho phosphoric acid.