Biology, asked by faheemfarooqfms, 9 months ago

why dna Contain phosphate not other compound?

Answers

Answered by arya2193
0

Answer:

a) Chemical structure of adenosine 5′-monophosphate (AMP), a nucleotide that is present in RNA. All nucleotides are composed of a phosphate moiety, containing up to three phosphate groups, linked to the 5′ hydroxyl of a pentose sugar, whose 1′ carbon is linked to an organic base. By convention, the carbon atoms of the pentoses are numbered with primes. In natural nucleotides, the 1′ carbon is joined by a β linkage to the base, which is in the plane above the furanose ring, as is the phosphate. (b) Haworth projections of ribose and deoxyribose, the pentoses in nucleic acids.

Explanation:

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Answered by poojadolai
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Answer:

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Explanation:

why dna Contain phosphate not other compound?

phosphate group is just a phosphorus atom bound to four oxygen atoms, but it has many important roles. Along with sugars and bases, it makes up nucleic acids, like DNA and RNA. As part of energy carriers, like ATP, it provides energy for moving our muscles.

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