Chemistry, asked by basit9058, 11 months ago

how does DNA differ from RNA in respect of sugar and base units present in it?

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Answered by ashutosh237549
1

Answer:

It differs from DNA chemically in two respects: (1) the nucleotides in RNA are ribonucleotides—that is, they contain the sugar ribose (hence the name ribonucleic acid) rather than deoxyribose; (2) although, like DNA, RNA contains the bases adenine (A), guanine (G), and cytosine (C), it contains the base uracil (U)

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