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.
atcg
The rails of DNA are made up of pairs of sugars and phosphates. The middle of the strand of DNA or the rungs are made of nucleotides and bases of codons, such as ATCG base pairs. The bond that holds the DNA together is a hydrogen bond.
ATCG are the bases in DNA. A stands for Adenine. T for Thymine. C for Cytosine. G for Guanine. Adenine always pairs with Thymine in the DNA ladder, as do Cytosine and Guanine.
As far as DNA is concerned there are 4 base pairs:AdenineThymineCytosineGuanineIn short they are referred to as ATCG. A is always paired with T C is always paired withAdenine-ThymineCytosine-Guanine
Apex: A bond from the transfer of 1 or more electrons.
atcg
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Nitrogenous bases (ATCG)
The rails of DNA are made up of pairs of sugars and phosphates. The middle of the strand of DNA or the rungs are made of nucleotides and bases of codons, such as ATCG base pairs. The bond that holds the DNA together is a hydrogen bond.
TAGC.
Every strand of DNA has a different code made out of atcg
TAGC. A pairs with T, G pairs with C.
TAGC
ATCG are the bases in DNA. A stands for Adenine. T for Thymine. C for Cytosine. G for Guanine. Adenine always pairs with Thymine in the DNA ladder, as do Cytosine and Guanine.
If u mean the second strand it would be TAGC since A-T, T-A, C-G, G-C to one strand to another
As far as DNA is concerned there are 4 base pairs:AdenineThymineCytosineGuanineIn short they are referred to as ATCG. A is always paired with T C is always paired withAdenine-ThymineCytosine-Guanine
Yes, a peptide bond is a covalent bond.