C pairs with G and A pairs with T. So, G G T C A T C A A. If that's not what you want, I'm sorry.
A G C T T A
A bonds with T
G bonds withC
and vice versa
hope this helps
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
Each of these letters stands for a base (which is part of one nucleotide). Therefore because there are 12 bases, there would be 12 nucleotides in the strand.
G-A-T-T-A-G-C-C-T-A-A-G-G-T-C-GDNA base-pairing rulesAdenine - ThymineCytosine - GuanineRNA base-pairing rulesAdenine - UracilCytosine - Guanine
A) sugar B) phosphate C) base ) polymerase
C-G-A-T-T-A-G-G-C
It's complimentary pair. C--G and T--A
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 sequence of nitrogenous bases (A, T, G and C) forms a code for the sequence of amino acids in a protein. The code is a triplet code. This means that three bases code for one amino acid. So, the order of the bases in a gene determines the order of the amino acids in a protein.
The nitrogenous base found in DNA but not RNA is called thymine. RNA contains the base uracil which during transcription(when genetic information is copied from DNA to RNA) pairs with the base adenine in DNA. So, DNA has four nitrogenous bases: (A) adenine, (C) cytosine, G (guanine), and T (thymine). And RNA has four nitrogenous bases: (A) adenine, (C) cytosine, G (guanine) and U (uracil)
Phosphate, deoxyribose, and a nitrogenous base (A, T, C, G)
A = adenine G = guanine C = cytosine T = thymine U = uracil
ATAGCC is complementary to the base sequence TATCGG.
The four nitrogenous bases found in DNA are: Adenine (A) Thymine (T) Guanine (G) Cytosine (C)
The information of DNA is actually coded in the sequence of nitrogen containing bases. These bases are named adenine, cytosine, guanine or thymine, (A, C, G, T).
A nucleotide is made up of a sugar (deoxyribose in DNA and ribose in RNA), a phosphate and a nitrogenous base. The nitrogenous bases found in DNA are adenine (A), thymine (T), cytosine (C) and guanine (G).
A pentose sugar (deoxyribose in DNA, ribose in RNA), a phosphate and a nitrogenous base (A, T, G or C).
A nucleotide is made of a phosphate, a sugar and a nitrogenous base. In RNA the sugar is ribose and in DNA it is deoxyribose. The bases in DNA are A, T, G and C. The T is replaced by U in RNA.