Hydrogen Bonds.
No each strand is complementary to the other, not identical. Opposite strands will run in the opposite direction with nucleotides that complement the other strand Ex. 5actgactgactg3 & 3tgactgactgac5
Nintendogs bond why you see them sniff each other and they lay on top of each other. That is how they bond.
One is known as the Leading strand, and the other is known as the Lagging strand.
H-bonds which occurs between base pairs as guanine of one strand bonded with cytosine of another strand by 3 H-bond and adenine bonded with thyamine with 2 H-bond
In producing a strand of DNA the nucleotides combine to form phosphodiester bonds.
Each strand in the double helix is complementary rather than identical to the opposite strand. The bases in one strand pair up with specific bases in the opposite strand according to the base pairing rule (A with T and C with G). This complementary base pairing allows each strand to serve as a template for the synthesis of a new strand during DNA replication.
hydrgen bond
Two bromine atoms will form a nonpolar covalent bond when they react with each other.
Hydrogen Bond
hydrogen bond
The anticodon only has one place to fit on the DNA strand. Positioning is very specific for each of the chemicals on a DNA strand. None of them will fit in place of any other.
The bond angle in the linear molecule is 180 degrees.