Biology Asked on November 30, 2021
According to my textbook:
While the 5′ end of a DNA strand is typically a monophosphate, the 5′
end of an RNA molecule is typically a triphosphate.
Source: Biology: How Life Works, 3rd Edition
How do we know the 5′ end of DNA a monophosphate? I understand that…
What I don’t understand is why DNA doesn’t have a triphosphate on the 5′ end like RNA. How does that happen?
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