GGATCGA is comlementary to the DNA strand CCTAGCT.
In DNA, A pairs with T and G pairs with C.
Therefore the complementary strand for the sequence CTT-AGG-CTT-ACC-A is GAA-TCC-GAA-TGG-T.
5' ACTCTG 3' = 3' TGAGAC 5'
accgtggc
TGCA
The complimentary DNA sequence would be TAGGCGATTGCATTGGG. The complimentary mRNA sequence would be UAGGCGAUUGCAUUGGG.
Simple you just look at what base it is then what ever base would be complementary to it, is your answer. ATTGTCCAGT is your answer
TGCA
The sequence of nucleotides of the complementary strand will be the nucleotides which bind to the nucleotides of the template. In DNA, adenine binds to thymine and cytosine binds to guanine. The complementary strand will therefore have an adenine where the template strand has a thymine, a guanine where the template has a cytosine, etc. For example: If the template strand is ATG-GGC-CTA-GCT Then the complementary strand would be TAC-CCG-GAT-CGA
lol i hate this question........its in meh science book
lol i hate this question........its in meh science book
TGCA
The complimentary DNA sequence would be TAGGCGATTGCATTGGG. The complimentary mRNA sequence would be UAGGCGAUUGCAUUGGG.
The complimentary strand of MRNA would be AAUUCCGG.
Simple you just look at what base it is then what ever base would be complementary to it, is your answer. ATTGTCCAGT is your answer
Answer and Explanation: For the sequence 5′-GATTACA-3′, the complementary DNA strand would be 3′-CTAATGT-5′. Often, DNA strands are written in the 5′ to 3′ direction, so the complementary strand would be 5′-TGTAATC-3′ when written 5′ to 3′. What is complementary to mRNA?
It would be T-A-A-G-C-C
TGCA
Yes, strands of DNA are complementary. Complementary implies that a sequence of nucleotides (ex. ATATG) is ordered in a way that it directly corresponds to another sequence of nucleotides (ex. TATAC). Since DNA is double stranded in most circumstances, barring mutagenesis, one strand would be pair with its complementary strand, thus forming the double stand.
The sequence of nucleotides of the complementary strand will be the nucleotides which bind to the nucleotides of the template. In DNA, adenine binds to thymine and cytosine binds to guanine. The complementary strand will therefore have an adenine where the template strand has a thymine, a guanine where the template has a cytosine, etc. For example: If the template strand is ATG-GGC-CTA-GCT Then the complementary strand would be TAC-CCG-GAT-CGA
A binds with T, C binds with G. Therefore the complementary DNA sequence will be GTCAATCG. The complementary RNA would be CAGTTAGC. The OH means it is the 3' end - so the complementary strand would be 5' at the same spot.