T T
When replicating DNA, adenine always bonds with thymine through two hydrogen bonds. This base pairing is essential for maintaining the complementary nature of DNA strands during replication.
In a DNA molecule cytosine always pairs with guanine, the same is true for an RNA molecule.
The 'steps' or 'rungs' of the DNA 'ladder' are complimentary pairs of bases bonded by hydrogen bonds. The bases are Adenine, Thymine, Cytosine and Guanine. Adenine always bonds to Thymine and Cytosine always bonds to Guanine.
The 'steps' or 'rungs' of the DNA 'ladder' are complimentary pairs of bases bonded by hydrogen bonds. The bases are Adenine, Thymine, Cytosine and Guanine. Adenine always bonds to Thymine and Cytosine always bonds to Guanine.
cytosine (C).
Guanine bonds to Cytosine Adenine bonds to Thymine. DNA, of course.
Adenine and Thymine together and cytosine and guanine together.
Adenine is always paired with thymine in DNA and with uracil in RNA through hydrogen bonds.
The bonds are called hydrogen bonds. You can find these bonds in the nucleotides of DNA.
The nitrogenous base, Cytosine, pairs with the nitrogenous base, Guanine.In DNA:Cytosine - GuanineAdenine - ThymineIn RNA:Cytosine - GuanineAdenine - Uracil
DNA contains two types of nitrogen bases. There are the purines, which include Adenine and Guanine, and the pyrimidines, which include Thymine and Cytosine. Adenine ALWAYS bonds with Thymine, and Guanine ALWAYS bonds with Cytosine, unless, of course, we have a mutation.
ttcgta, because A always bonds to T and G always bonds to C. I always remembered this because A and T are made of strait lines and G and C are curves