Well first and foremost a nucleotide would refer to a single letter of that 7 letter sequene. More specifically it would refer to the nitrogenous base (A, T, G, C or U) with phosphates attached to the ribose. Since they are connected through phosphates in DNA nucleotide is an acceptable definition. You have already answered your own question, you have written the nucleotide sequence. It is AATGCGA for that segment of DNA. The names would be adenosine, guanosine, cytosine, and thymine for each of the letters.
isolueciene, phenyalanine, glycine
Ggc tct aac
transcription
It is GGCC and CCGG!
RNA Polymerase.
The complementary sequence of a DNA strand is written with the beginning letters of the bases: adenine (A), cytosine (C), guanine (G), and thymine (T). You would replace each letter with its complementary nucleotide. Replace: A for T T for A C for G G for C
Ggc tct aac
transcription
transcription
It is GGCC and CCGG!
Transcription.
RNA Polymerase.
If one strand of DNA has a nucleotide base sequence of tcaggtccat, its complementary strand is agtccaggta. Adenine pairs with thymine, while guanine pairs with cytosine.
Yes(:
copying part of the nucleotide sequence of DNA into a complementary sequence in RNA is called TRANSCRIPTION
The complementary sequence to aggtac would be tccatg. T is complementary to A and C is complementary to G.
The complementary sequence of a DNA strand is written with the beginning letters of the bases: adenine (A), cytosine (C), guanine (G), and thymine (T). You would replace each letter with its complementary nucleotide. Replace: A for T T for A C for G G for C
The nucleotide sequences in the two chains of a DNA molecule are complementary.This means that A (adenine) in one chain always binds to T (thymine) in the other, and C (cytosine) always binds to G (guanine).So if the sequence in one chain is:AATCTGGAthe complementary sequence in the other chain will be:TTAGACCT