Biology, asked by nardeosingh123, 7 months ago

What is the common to RNA, ATP and NAD+?
These are polynucleotides
Same number of phosphates
Presence of ribose sugar
Presence of similar pyrimidines​

Answers

Answered by ꜱɴᴏᴡyǫᴜᴇᴇɴ
3

Explanation:

Presence of ribose sugar

Hope it helps

Answered by dhyeyamallyaim
0

Answer:

The common feature between RNA, ATP, and NAD+ is the

Presence of ribose sugar.

Explanation:

  • Ribose sugar is a simple sugar having a molecular formula C5H10O5.
  • The structure is made up of a single-ring pentose sugar molecule.
  • It is a very important component of RNA (RiboNucleic Acid), ATP (Adenosine Triphosphate), and NAD+ ( Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide).
  • RNA molecule has a d-ribose sugar molecule that alternates with phosphate groups and forms the backbone of the polymer.
  • ATP molecule that supplies energy to the body cells is made up of one molecule of a ribose sugar and three phosphate groups along with an adenine base.
  • NAD+ consists of a single ribose ring, an adenine molecule, and nicotinamide, both of which are attached to the carbon atom at the first position.

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