The sides of the DNA ladder are formed by alternating sugar and phosphate molecules. These sugar-phosphate backbones run parallel to each other on opposite sides of the double helix structure of the DNA molecule.
The two sides are formed by the four bases, Adenine, Guanine, Thymine and Cytosine. Adenine on one side of the ladder would pair with Guanine on the corresponding ladder. The same goes for Cytosine and Thymine.
The sides of the DNA ladder are composed of alternating sugar and phosphate molecules. These sugar-phosphate backbones provide stability and support for the DNA molecule.
The sides of the ladder are made up of alternating deoxyribose sugar and phosphate molecules. The steps or rungs of the ladder are made up of nitrogenous bases held together by hydrogen bonds.
what holds the sides of the DNA ladder together
The sides of the DNA ladder are formed by alternating sugar and phosphate molecules. These sugar-phosphate backbones run parallel to each other on opposite sides of the double helix structure of the DNA molecule.
The two sides are formed by the four bases, Adenine, Guanine, Thymine and Cytosine. Adenine on one side of the ladder would pair with Guanine on the corresponding ladder. The same goes for Cytosine and Thymine.
Phosphate and sugar make up the sides of a DNA ladder.
The DNA ladder is made of sugar and phosphates.
Phosphates and Sugars formthe sides of the DNA ladder~
The Sides of this ladder equate to the Dna's Sugar-Phosphate Backbone; the Rungs of this ladder equate to the Hydrogen-bonding that takes place between base pairs.
sugar phospate
The sides of the DNA ladder are alternating deoxyribose (sugar) molecules and phosphate molecules. The DNA bases attach to the sugar molecules.
The sides of the DNA ladder are composed of alternating sugar and phosphate molecules. These sugar-phosphate backbones provide stability and support for the DNA molecule.
the ladder
I'm assuming you mean the double helix "ladder-like" formation of a strand of DNA. The sides of the structure are essentially a phosphate-deoxyribose backbone.
No; the rungs of a ladder and the sides of a ladder intersect. Skew lines do not intersect.