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The four bases of DNA are Adenine, Thymine, Cytosine, and Glucosis.
the pairing is adanine with thymine and guanine with cytosine. the pairing is adanine with thymine and guanine with cytosine.
Adenine: C5N5H5 Cytosine: C4H5N3O Guanine: C5H5ON5 Thymine: C5H6N2O2 Uracil : C4H4N2O2
The nitrogen bases pair up in twos cytosine with guanine and adenine with thymine
guanine, cytosine, thymine, adenine.
A, T, C, and Gadenine (A)thymine (T)guanine (G)cytosine (C)
guanine cytosine thymine adenine (an RNA molecule replaces thymine with uricel)
Adenine, Thymine, Cytosine, and Guanine. Adenine pairs with Thymine (A-T), and Cytosine pairs with Guanine (C-G). In an RNA molecule, Thymine is replaced by Uracil, so it would be Adenine and Uracil (A-U) and Cytosine and Guanine (C-G).
Phospaphate,Sugar,Guanine, Thymine,Adenine,Cytosine,and Guanine.
cytosine, guanine, adenine, and thymine.
T- thymine A- adenine G- guanine C- cytosine. All bases are joined by Hydrogen bonds: A to T (2 H-bonds) G to C (3 H-bonds)
The two different nucleotide pair bonds found in DNA are guanine-cytosine and adenine-thymine.
The percentage of the nucleotide adenine = the percentage of thymine. The percentage of guanine = the percentage of cytosine.
There are four different nucleobases including adenine, thymine, guanine and cytosine. Each nucleobase pairs with it's opposite, for example adenine pairs with thymine and guanine pairs with cytosine. Knowing this, if a DNA sample had 10% thymine that means it would have 10% adenine equalling 20% of the entire sample for the both of them. The remaining 80% of the sample would contain 40% cytosine and 40% guanine.
Adenine, Thymine, Cytosine and Guanine. they pair up - A & T (Adenine and Thymine) - C & G (Cytosine and Guanine)
A-Adenine C-Cytosine T-thymine G-guanine
Guanine which binds with Cytosine, and Adenine which binds with Thymine.