The difference between ATP and the nucleoside triphosphates used during DNA replication is that the sugar deoxyribose is present in the nucleoside triphosphates used during replication, whereas ATP has the sugar ribose.
In contrast to ribose, deoxyribose has a hydrogen atom on the 2' carbon position, which is occupied by a hydroxyl group.The double helix is opened and complementary deoxyribose nucleoside triphosphates (dNTP) (e.g., ATP, GTP) are attached to each strand, successively at the 3′ end of the new, growing complementary strands. As a result, complementary DNA strands elongate in the 5′ to 3′ direction. ATP is a nucleoside triphosphate with the structure of a nitrogenous base (adenine), a ribose sugar, and three serially bonded phosphate groups.
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