Adenine
DNA adenine pairs with Thymine
In DNA, Adenine matches with Thymine and Cytosine matches with Guanine. RNA is the same except instead of Thymine, it's Uracil
Adenine,Thymine,Guanine,and Cytosine
The nucleotide base pairs are: A-T C-G Thats Adenine to Thymine and Cytosine to Guanine During DNA transcription Uracil bonds with Adenine instead of Thymine, although when A-U is bonded it would technically be an RNA molecule
A nucleotide consists of a phosphate molecule, a deoxyribose sugar, and a base (adenine, cytosine, gaunine, and thymine).
It is not a DNA base pair itself, it is a DNA nucleotide base. It does however, form a base pair when bonded with adenine.
A nucleotide is the sugar (in DNA is a deoxyribose in RNA it's ribose), phosphate group and 1 base. A base pair is the "rung in the ladder" for example in DNA it could be adenine + thymine or guanine + cytosine. In RNA the thymine is replaced by uracil
DNA - Adenine (A Base) Cytosine (C Base) Guanine (G Base) Thymine (T Base) RNA - Adenine (A Base) Cytosine (C Base) Guanine (G Base) Uracil (U Base)
thymine and deoxyribose
The three components that create a DNA nucleotide are a phosphate group, a nitrogenous base [this will be either Adenine, Guanine, Cytosine, or Thymine], and a Sugar [deoxyribose, which is how we get the D in DNA].
A nucleotide is composed of a nitrogenous base (adenine, guanine, cytosine, thymine, or uracil), a ribose sugar (ribose or deoxyribose), and a number of phosphates (1 to 3).
In DNA adenine binds to thymine. In RNA adenine binds to uracil. Adenine can also bind the modified nucleotide base inosine.