From left to right.
That would be ducky you
Wrong. UAC is the complimentary base sequence on the mRNA strand. RNA does not use the T nucleotide don u think if it should be written like CAU coz rna polymerase reads 3 to 5 and gives 5 to 3
The cation is always written first in a chemical name. Cations are positively charged ions, while anions are negatively charged ions. The convention is to write the cation first, followed by the anion.
If we put a comma in that sentence after DNA, the answer is yes, nucleotides are indeed the monomers of DNA. As written, the question makes no sense, since "DNA nucleotides" are not polymers and therefore do not have monomers.
259 is the mass number of the isotope with the longest half life. This system is a convention from IUPAC for elements having very unstable and artificial isotopes.
Maysoon Salama has written: 'The isolation of Lactococcus lactis subsp. cremoris from nature with probes for 16S ribosomal RNAs' -- subject(s): Nucleic acid hybridization, Nucleic acid probes, RNA, Nucleotide sequence, Lactococcus lactis
A complimentary DNA sequence is the genetic code on the partner strand that aligns with and corresponds to (matches) the code on the primary strand. Each nucleotide has a match, A matches T and C matches G, therefore the complimentary sequence for ATCGA is TAGCT.
The Constitution was written at this convention.
Delegates wrote the United States Constitution (APEX)
Annabella Elliott Richards has written: 'The partial enzymatic hydrolysis of yeast nucleic acid ..' -- subject(s): Nucleic acids, Hydrolysis
World's Temperance Convention has written: 'The proceedings of the World's Temperance Convention' -- subject(s): Temperance, Congresses
A. Penfield has written: 'National Cotton Convention' -- subject(s): National Cotton-Growing Convention
Lev A. Osterman has written: 'Methods of protein and nucleic acid research'
A constitution was added in the hope that Texas would be made a separate state in Mexico.
The Constitutional Convention, where the modern day Constitution for the United States was written.
Ilse Marie Johanne Ortabasi has written: 'Nuclear and cytoplasmic nucleic acid synthesis in Acetabularia' -- subject(s): Nucleic acids, Proteins, Acetabularia mediterranea, Synthesis
James H. Watterson has written: 'Towards the development of a fiber-optic nucleic acid biosensor: An examination of factors affecting selectivity of detection of interfacial nucleic acid hybridization'