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The correct base-pairing rules ofr DNA. . .The base pairing rules for DNA areA pairs with TG pairs with CC pairs with GT pairs with A
the empirical rules of probablility applies to the continuous probability distribution
Adenine pairs with thymine, and cytosine pairs with guanine.
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Just distribution in society, structured by various moral, legal, and cultural rules and principles.
Base-pairing rules are the observed pairings of bases when strands of DNA, RNA, or both, pair with each other. Bases follow these rules during DNA replication, transcription, translation (pairing between messenger RNA and transfer RNA), and when primers and probes are active.The base pairing rules for DNA are * A pairs with T * G pairs with C * C pairs with G * T pairs with A The base pairing rules for DNA (left) with RNA (right) are: * A pairs with U * G pairs with C * C pairs with G * T pairs with A When two molecules of RNA pair, the rules are: * A pairs with U * G pairs with C * C pairs with G * U pairs with A
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Pair rules also "nitrogenous bases" are: Adenine pairs with thymine Guanine pairs with cytosine Thymine pairs with adenine Cytosine pairs with guanine In case you are wondering when transcription occurs the top of the deoxyribose double-helix backbone can have thymine. Though on the RNA strand it cannot have thymine, but is replaced with Uracil.
In DNA:Adenine (A) pairs with Thymine (T)Guanine (G) pairs with Cysteine (C)A - tg - c
A rectangle has three rules: -2 pairs of parallel sides -four 90 degree angles -2 pairs of congruent sides A parallelogram has three rules: -2 pairs of parallel sides - 2 pairs of congruent angles -2 pairs of congruent sides The only difference is that a rectangle has 90 degree angles, which a parallelogram doesn't have. That's why a parallelogram can't be a rectangle. A rectangle follows all the rules of being a parallelogram, so it can be a parallelogram.
Chargaff's rule means that there should be the same number of purine and pyrimidine bases in DNA. The base pairing rules means that A always pairs with T, and G always pairs with C ie. a purine always pairs with a pyrimidine, so there must be the same number of both proving Chargaff's rule.
Jeffrey D. Brewer has written: 'Wa ter distribution rules and water distribution performance'