there is no bone in DNA but what holds the complementary base pairs are the following: two hydrogen bonds between adenine and thymine, and three hydrogen bonds between guanine and cytosine. i hoped this helped :)
The bone that holds complimentary bases of DNA together is not actually a bone, but rather a chemical bond. It is called a hydrogen bond, and it forms between the nucleotides that make up the DNA molecule. The hydrogen bond specifically forms between the nitrogenous bases, such as adenine (A) and thymine (T), or cytosine (C) and guanine (G), allowing the DNA strands to stay connected.
Bone to bone connections occur by way of ligaments, whereas bone to muscle connections occur by way of tendons.
non polar covalent
They are constituents of DNA. Adenine, cytosine, guanine and thymine are the glue that holds together the two sugar-phosphate strands which form the back-bone of DNA. The order in which these bases occur is what stores the information in DNA.
The skeleton does not hold any memories. Your brain holds memories. Your brain is inside a brain case made of bone.
They're called OSTEOCYTES calcifying together in a matrix tissue of bone matter.
The tissue that holds the muscle and bone together is called a SINEW. a sinew is a tough, fibrous tissue uniting muscle and bone. It is the source of muscular power and strength.
Males do have a pubic bone. The pubic bone is the front bone portion of the pelvis or pelvic crest in the lower abdomen. Holds your hip bones together.
Bone to bone connections occur by way of ligaments, whereas bone to muscle connections occur by way of tendons.
non polar covalent
This is done by the tendons, sometimes called sinew.
Ligaments are the fibrous connective tissue that holds bones in a joint together.
The cartilage is there to stop bone rubbing against bone. It performs like a lubricant.
I know that ligaments are a fibrous material that holds tissue together, whereas cartilage connects bone.
clavicle bone
Directly, ligaments tether bone to bone. However, indirectly (and directly) muscular attachments and tendons also help reinforce the connections and provide stability to joints and allow for mobility.
The capsule of the joint holds the bone ends together. The capsule is mainly composed of collagen fibers. The capsule is tight enough to hold the bone ends. Loose enough to permit the moments of the bones.
It holds you up.