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________ is the five-carbon sugar found in DNA.

2 Answers

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The answer is deoxyribose.
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User Mcatach
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Answer:

Deoxyribose is the five -carbon sugar found in DNA.

Step-by-step explanation:

The molecule of DNA is composed of nucleotides. The nucleotides are units composed by a phosphate group, a nitrogenous base and a molecule of the carbohydrate deoxyribose.

The deoxyribose is a pentose sugar. Four carbon atoms and a single atom of oxygen form a five membered ring. The other carbon atom is outside the ring and forms a part of a CH2 group.

It contains a five carbon carbohydrate ring bound to the phosphate group, on its other side, the deoxyribose is bonded to a nitrogenous based: Adenine, Thymine, Cytosine or Guanine.

User NSquid
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