It would be T-A-A-G-C-C
RNA Polymerase.
Wrong. UAC is the complimentary base sequence on the mRNA strand. RNA does not use the T nucleotide don u think if it should be written like CAU coz rna polymerase reads 3 to 5 and gives 5 to 3
If u mean the second strand it would be TAGC since A-T, T-A, C-G, G-C to one strand to another
The answer to this is GAUCCAUG. The way to find this is simple. In RNA, Thymine (T) is changed to Uracil (U). So, when you switch DNA to RNA, you switch the letters around. (C=G A=T T=A and G=C.) [You switch the order]. However, when you do this, be sure when you insert a T in RNA, you make it a U instead.Transcription is the process of making a strand of RNA from a strand of DNA.
Restriction enzymes (also known as restriction endonucleases) are proteins which cut DNA up at specific sequences in the genome. For example, the commonly used restriction endonuclease EcoRI recognizes every point in DNA with the sequence GAATTC, and cuts at the point between the Guanine and Adenine. Interestingly, the recognition sequences for most restriction endonucleases are genetic palindromes, e.g., the sequence reads exactly the same backwards on the complementary strand. In the case of EcoRI, the two complementary DNA strands for the recognition sequence are: 5'--GAATTC ---3'3'--CTTAAG--5'
During DNA replication, the enzyme DNA polymerase catalyses the formation of new strands of DNA, using the old strands as models. DNA has a double-helix structure, with two strands forming each helix. Each strand is made up of DNA nucleotides, with the genetic information encoded in the sequence of different nucleotides (different nucleotides are distinguished by molecules called 'bases' attached to them, so the sequence of nucleotides is known as the 'base sequence'). The base sequence of one strand is complementary to that of its' neighbour - the base A binds with T, and C with G, so if one strand had the sequence ATTACA, the base sequence of the complementary strand would be TAATGT. When DNA polymerase creates a new DNA strand, it does so by matching nucleotides to the base sequence of one of the strands - the template strand. New nucleotides are brought in, which match the template in a complementary fashion (ie. A-T, C-G), and join to become one new strand. This new strand is complementary to the template.
RNA Polymerase.
The first stage of gene expression is known as transcription. This is the process by which RNA Polymerase, along with other transcription factors, reads and transcribes the DNA sequence into a complementary RNA strand.
If the tRNA has the sequence UUA, then the mRNA it reads from will have the sequence complementary to UUA, which is AAU. RNA uses the nucleic acid uracil instead of the DNA counterpart, thymine.
the other strand of DNA would be gccaatga if it was being translated as RNA it would instead be gccaauga
A palindrome is:A word, phrase, verse, or sentence that reads the same backward or forward.A segment of double-stranded DNA in which the nucleotide sequence of one strand reads in reverse order to that of the complementary strand.Therefore, principle doesn't have a palindrome. there is a exactly identical answer you the one you asked, only the answer is "Tenet." What's tenet?
it would read: atgacgt
Restriction enzymes recognize a specific sequence of nucleotides and produce a double-stranded cut in the DNA. While recognition sequences vary between 4 and 8 nucleotides, many of them are palindromic, which correspond to nitrogenous base sequences that read the same backwards and forwards. In theory, there are two types of palindromic sequences that can be possible in DNA. The mirror-likepalindrome is similar to those found in ordinary text, in which a sequence reads the same forward and backwards on a single strand of DNA strand, as in GTAATG. The inverted repeat palindrome is also a sequence that reads the same forward and backwards, but the forward and backward sequences are found in complementary DNA strands (i.e., of double-stranded DNA), as in GTATAC (GTATAC being complementary to CATATG). Inverted repeat palindromes are more common and have greater biological importance than mirror-like palindromes.
Wrong. UAC is the complimentary base sequence on the mRNA strand. RNA does not use the T nucleotide don u think if it should be written like CAU coz rna polymerase reads 3 to 5 and gives 5 to 3
BBC is the DNA in a MRNA sequence. This is part of the body.
If u mean the second strand it would be TAGC since A-T, T-A, C-G, G-C to one strand to another
The answer to this is GAUCCAUG. The way to find this is simple. In RNA, Thymine (T) is changed to Uracil (U). So, when you switch DNA to RNA, you switch the letters around. (C=G A=T T=A and G=C.) [You switch the order]. However, when you do this, be sure when you insert a T in RNA, you make it a U instead.Transcription is the process of making a strand of RNA from a strand of DNA.