mRNA is single stranded - meaning the bases are not found in pairs (AT, GC) like they are in a double-stranded structure.
Therefore the bases themselves will not be directly linked, but the entire nucleotide (sugar, phosphate and base) will be linked to the previous and next nucleotide in the chain by a phosphodiester bond.
In DNA (or dsRNA) the C and G are held together by three hydrogen bonds.
Adenine and Thymine Guanine and Cytosine held together by hydrogen bonds: 2 for A-T and 3 for G-C
You just need to switch G with C and T with A. Thymine and Adenine are always bonded together. Guanine and Cytosine are always bonded together. They would be switch so the nucleotide sequence would be. C-G-A-T-T-A-G-G-C
The nitrogen bases are held together in the center of the DNA molecule by hydrogen bonds. These bonds form between specific base pairs: adenine (A) with thymine (T), and guanine (G) with cytosine (C). The hydrogen bonds provide stability to the DNA double helix structure.
The complementary strand for CGATTAC would be GCTAATG. C and G are always paired together, and A and T are always paired together.
The way I learned "French Folk Song" was playing these: (E String) A A A, G# G# G#, F# G# A E (E is held out for 2 beats) (A String) D D D, C# C# C#, B B B A (A is held out for 2 beats) (A String) A B C#, A B C#, A B C# D (D is held out for 2 beats) (E String Down the Scale) A G# F# E D C# B A B A (A is held out for 2 beats)
The notes together depend on which type of C chord you want to play. C Major Notes are C, E, G C Minor Notes are C, E flat, G C Diminished Notes are C, E flat, and G flat C Augmented Notes are C, E, G sharp.
To determine the complementary strand of DNA, you would match each base with its complementary base: T -> A, A -> T, G -> C, C -> G. So, the complementary strand to t-t-t-g-a-c-c-a-g would be a-a-a-c-t-g-g-t-c.
i will show you how to play ode to joy its like this: b b c d d c b a g g a b b a b b c d d c b a g g a b a g a a b g a b c b g a b c b a g a d b b c d d c b a g g a b a g in the third part the (b c b) are voiced together means play them fast together but the rest is slow
A=Adenine T=Thymine G=Guanine C=Cytosine A and T bond together with 2 hydrogen bonds G and C bond together with 3 hydrogen bonds A T G | C
Guanine (G) and Cytosine (C) are joined together with three hydrogen bonds, whereas Adenine (A) and Thymine (T) are only held together with two. This makes G and C more stable than A and T.
Cytosine (C) and guanine (G) nucleotides are held together by three hydrogen bonds in the DNA double helix. This bonding contributes to the stability of the DNA structure, allowing for the specific pairing between these complementary bases. The three hydrogen bonds between C and G are stronger than the two hydrogen bonds formed between adenine (A) and thymine (T).
Hydrogen bonds