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A-t g-c
I'm not quite sure what you mean by this, but the letters of DNA are A (Adenine), T (Thymine), C (Cytostine), and G (guanine). You may be thinking of how T is replaced by U (Uracell) in RNA code.
A goes with T and C goes with G
according to my calculations, the answer to this question is a single circular DNA molecule... your welcome (:
A, G, C, U whereas in DNA we have A,G,C,T in conclusion we have uracil that substitutes thymine in an RNA sequence
The nitrogen bases of DNA have letters A, C, G, T to represent it. B is absent in DNA
The letter B does not represent one of the possible basis in the DNA stucture. The letters A represent Adenine, G represent Guanine , C represent Cytosine and the 4th is T for Thymine.
There is no letter C in DNA or RNA .
A-t g-c
A with T and G with C .
The letter that represent the composite number is letter C.
yes you would
The four bases found in DNA are:adenine (A)cytosine (C)guanine (G)thymine (T).
A, T, C, and Gadenine (A)thymine (T)guanine (G)cytosine (C)
I'm not quite sure what you mean by this, but the letters of DNA are A (Adenine), T (Thymine), C (Cytostine), and G (guanine). You may be thinking of how T is replaced by U (Uracell) in RNA code.
The bases in DNA are: Adenine(A), Thymine(T), Guanine(G), Cytosine(C) when they pair up: A-T, C-T
DNA is encoded through certain molecules Adenine "A", Thymine "T", Guanine "G", and Cytosine "C", the "code" of DNA. "A" is always bonded with "T", and "G" with "C". During Protein Syntheses, an enzyme will create an RNA molecule from the DNA molecule, which will be used to link the amino acids that make up proteins. there are a number of amino acids, and each one has a specific 3 letter code from the encoded molecules in DNA that they will bond to, and this will organize the amino acids into proteins