The ratios A to T and G to C are very important to the structure of DNA. A or Adenie only bonds with T or Thymine so there are almost always equal numbers in the structure. This is also true with C or cytosine and G or guanine.
The four bases found in DNA are:adenine (A)cytosine (C)guanine (G)thymine (T).
The bases are: Adenine[A] Guanine[G] Cytosine[C] Thymine[T]
There is no letter C in DNA or RNA .
DNA is double helical in structure. each spiral strand, composed of a sugar phosphate backbone and attached bases, is connected to a complementary strand by hydrogen bonding (non- covalent) between paired bases, adenine (A) with thymine (T) and guanine (G) with cytosine (C).
The complementary strand of this DNA sequence is... A T G C T A A C C
A to T, T to A, G to C, C to G
The nitrogen bases of DNA have letters A, C, G, T to represent it. B is absent in DNA
adenine (A)cytosine (C)guanine (G)thymine (T).
A goes with T and C goes with G
dna
DNA is composed of phosphate, proteins, nitogenous bases, sugar. they all maintain the structure of the DNA and are responsible for replicating the DNA accurately during replication.. for example; nitrogenous bases are correctly base paired i. e. A with T and G with C.
These four letters are abbreviation of four nucleotides that make up DNA.
The four bases found in DNA are:adenine (A)cytosine (C)guanine (G)thymine (T).
They correspond to the six possible ratios of two sides of a right triangle: a/b, a/c, b/a, b/c, c/a & c/b.
The bases are: Adenine[A] Guanine[G] Cytosine[C] Thymine[T]
The ratios a/b and c/d [ or a:b and c:d ] are equal if (and only if) a*d = b*c
Joseph L. Svirbely, Albert Szent-Gyorgyi, and Charles Glen King