No. Single ring base (pyrimidines) such as thymine or cytosine must bind with a double ring base (purines) such as adenine or guanine.
A purine will always pair with a pyrimidine. Examples of purines are adenine (pairs with thymine or uracil) and guanine (pairs with cytosine). Examples of pyrimidines are thymine (pairs with adenine), uracil (pairs with adenine), and cytosine (pairs with guanine).
Base pairs.
A-T base pairs have 2 hydrogen bonds and G-C base pairs have 3 hydrogen bonds. Therefore, A-T base pairs are weaker than G-C base pairs.
two
Uracil is the base in RNA that pairs with adenine.
One in every 1,000 base pairs of DNA
A purine will always pair with a pyrimidine. Examples of purines are adenine (pairs with thymine or uracil) and guanine (pairs with cytosine). Examples of pyrimidines are thymine (pairs with adenine), uracil (pairs with adenine), and cytosine (pairs with guanine).
Base pairs.
A-T base pairs have 2 hydrogen bonds and G-C base pairs have 3 hydrogen bonds. Therefore, A-T base pairs are weaker than G-C base pairs.
DNA base pairs.
two
Base Hita base knock
50 base pairs
Uracil is the base in RNA that pairs with adenine.
four base pairs
Every chromosome is a different size so the number of base pairs is different for each chromosome. X chromosome has more that 153 million base pairs (greater that 306 million bases) Y chromosome has around 50 million base pairs (around 100 million bases)
there are five base pairs in klinefelter syndrome