GCCGATAT
GCCGATAT
CCGGTAAT
which one of the following strands od DNA in the complement strand to c-c-a-t-c-g
A complimentary DNA sequence is the genetic code on the partner strand that aligns with and corresponds to (matches) the code on the primary strand. Each nucleotide has a match, A matches T and C matches G, therefore the complimentary sequence for ATCGA is TAGCT.
If u mean the second strand it would be TAGC since A-T, T-A, C-G, G-C to one strand to another
tacag
The base sequence CAGACT corresponds to the DNA strand, and it would be complementary to the RNA strand with the sequence GUCUGA. Therefore, the original strand is the DNA strand.
its tcaa
The 2nd strand matching DNA refers to the strand that can pair with the original DNA sequence through complementary base pairing. In DNA replication, this matching strand is synthesized by DNA polymerase according to the sequence on the original template strand.
Be more clear with your question please. The complement of a single strand of DNA is the other strand. The complement to the single DNA strand "ATCGGTA" would be "TAGCCAT" The mRNA complement of the DNA strand ATCGGTA is UAGCCAU The tRNA anticodon of the DNA strand ATCGGTA is UTCGGTU Hope that helps A cell's endovment of DNA, its genetic information is called its genome
To determine the base sequence of a DNA strand from a given mRNA sequence, you need to consider that mRNA is synthesized from the DNA template strand through a process called transcription. The mRNA bases pair with their complementary DNA bases, where adenine (A) pairs with thymine (T), uracil (U) in mRNA pairs with adenine (A) in DNA, cytosine (C) pairs with guanine (G), and guanine (G) pairs with cytosine (C). Therefore, to find the DNA base sequence, you can convert the mRNA sequence to its corresponding DNA sequence by replacing U with A and reversing the order to get the complementary DNA strand.
A complement strand refers to a sequence of nucleotides in DNA or RNA that is complementary to a given strand. In DNA, for instance, adenine (A) pairs with thymine (T), and cytosine (C) pairs with guanine (G). This complementary pairing is crucial for processes such as DNA replication and transcription, ensuring that genetic information is accurately copied and expressed. In RNA, uracil (U) replaces thymine, maintaining the same base pairing rules.