Guanine
Cytosine always binds with guanine
Adenine always bonds with thymine.
quit being lazy and find it yourself
Guanine.
guanine
Guanine
deoxyribose sugars, which are bonded to a phosphate group and a nitrogenous base Very useful little critters, they are basically a nitrogenous base, a five-carbon sugar, and one to three phosphate groups (mono- to tri-phosphate). A very good article in the link below.
They form hydrogen bonds with their complementary base pair. There are 3 hydrogen bonds that link Cytosine and Guanine, however there are only 2 hydrogen bonds that link Adenine and Thymine.
Watson and Crick came up with the base-pairing rule for nucleic acids using Chargaff's rule that in DNA the percentages of adenine and thymine are equal, and the percentages of guanine and cytosine are equal. Refer to the related link below.
C5 is bound to that nucleotides own phophate group. C3 is bound to the phosphate group of the nucleotide before it by a covalant link creating a srong "backbone"
Guanine
Nucleotides are the components from which nucleic acids (DNA and RNA) are made. Each nucleotide consists of: * a 5 - carbon (pentose) sugar (ribose in RNA, deoxyribose in DNA) * a nitrogen-containing base (adenine, thymine, guanine, cytosine and uracil) * a phosphate group In DNA or RNA the phosphate groups link sugar molecules together to make up a polynucleotide. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nucleotide
Nucleotides are the components from which nucleic acids (DNA and RNA) are made. Each nucleotide consists of: * a 5 - carbon (pentose) sugar (ribose in RNA, deoxyribose in DNA) * a nitrogen-containing base (adenine, thymine, guanine, cytosine and uracil) * a phosphate group In DNA or RNA the phosphate groups link sugar molecules together to make up a polynucleotide.
deoxyribose sugars, which are bonded to a phosphate group and a nitrogenous base Very useful little critters, they are basically a nitrogenous base, a five-carbon sugar, and one to three phosphate groups (mono- to tri-phosphate). A very good article in the link below.
it links with Guanine.
They form hydrogen bonds with their complementary base pair. There are 3 hydrogen bonds that link Cytosine and Guanine, however there are only 2 hydrogen bonds that link Adenine and Thymine.
Complementary nitrogen bases pair by means of hydrogen bonds. Refer to the related link below for an illustration.
carbon 1
Watson and Crick came up with the base-pairing rule for nucleic acids using Chargaff's rule that in DNA the percentages of adenine and thymine are equal, and the percentages of guanine and cytosine are equal. Refer to the related link below.
Thymine and cytosine are two nitrogen bases found in DNA. DNA is composed of thousands of nucleotides which are composed of one of four nitrogen bases. Both of these nitrogen bases are also pyrimidines, or they have one ring like structure See related link for more info on thymine, cytosine and pyrimidines.
The orange one....durr
C5 is bound to that nucleotides own phophate group. C3 is bound to the phosphate group of the nucleotide before it by a covalant link creating a srong "backbone"