Chemistry, asked by Junnu12345, 6 months ago

The sugar moiety present in DNA and RNA molecules respectively is
a...B-D-2-deoxyribose, B-D-ribose
b...B-D-2-deoxyribose, B-D-2-deoxyribose
c...B-D-ribose, B-D-2-deoxyribose
d...B-D-ribose. B-D-nbose​

Answers

Answered by mydollychinni
5

Answer:

Explanation:

Concept 6 Review

Ribose and Deoxyribose

The 5-carbon sugars ribose and deoxyribose are important components of nucleotides, and are found in RNA and DNA, respectively.

The sugars found in nucleic acids are pentose sugars; a pentose sugar has five carbon atoms.

A combination of a base and a sugar is called a nucleoside.

Ribose, found in RNA, is a "normal" sugar, with one oxygen atom attached to each carbon atom.

Deoxyribose, found in DNA, is a modified sugar, lacking one oxygen atom (hence the name "deoxy"). This difference of one oxygen atom is important for the enzymes that recognize DNA and RNA, because it allows these two molecules to be easily distinguished inside organisms.

Ribose and deoxyribose

Notice the difference between ribose and deoxyribose in the figure above. In ribose, carbon atom #2 carries one hydroxyl group (colored red). In deo

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