A pyrimidine group consists of only three nitrogenous bases: Uracil, Thymine, and Cytosine. All three are nitrogenous bases, so all three are the answer.
Uracil, Thymine, and Cytosine
Pyrimidines.
Pyrimidines are one of the building blocks of nucleic acids. There are thee nitrogen bases in the pyrimidine group: cytosine, uracil, and thymine.
The Nitrogeneous base is found in DNA.
This is the deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA).
Cytosine.
purines
A purine or pyrimidine base;A sugar;A phosphate group.
This is a basic principle of DNA base pairing called Chargaff's rule. Adenine (purine) pairs with thymine (pyrimidine), while guanine (purine) pairs with cytosine (pyrimidine). This complementary base pairing is essential for the double-stranded structure of DNA.
Sugar phosphate,phosphoral and nitrogeneous base
Cytosine is the pyrimidine that bonds to the purine Guanine in both DNA and Rna.
Yes, uracil is a derivative of a pyrimidine. It is also useful to note that uracil is a naturally occurring derivative.