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Guanine-Cytosine
Guanine bonds to Cytosine in DNA through three hydrogen bonds. It also bonds to a Deoxyribose molecule in the backbone of the DNA molecule.
DNA base pair are Cytosine with Guanine and Thymine with Adenine.
In the replication of DNA Thymine bonds with cytosine.
Hydrogen bonds (two between adenine and thymine, and three between guanine and cytosine).
guanine-cytosine
Guanine-Cytosine
Guanine bonds to Cytosine in DNA through three hydrogen bonds. It also bonds to a Deoxyribose molecule in the backbone of the DNA molecule.
DNA base pair are Cytosine with Guanine and Thymine with Adenine.
The two different nucleotide pair bonds found in DNA are guanine-cytosine and adenine-thymine.
In the replication of DNA Thymine bonds with cytosine.
Dioxyribose is the complex sugar backbone of DNA which bonds to a nucleotide bases (adenine, cytosine, thymine and guanine), there is then a phosphate group attached to the side of the dioxyribose. The molecule is basically the backbone of the whole DNA molecule. enjoy trying to understand :P
Yes it is, along with the other nucleotide bases adenine, cytosine and guanine. Thymine bonds with Adenine in Dna. Adenine bonds with Uracil in Rna.
Guanine
A nucleotide consists of three parts: * A Sugar (Deoxyribose) * A Phosphate Group * A Nitrogen-containing base Base Pairing Rules A&T (Adenine&Thymine) C&G (Cytosine&Guanine)
Guanine an thymine
A DNA molecule is held together by its hydrogen bonds. The bonds are in between the bases of the molecule, for example cytosine and guanine. Because hydrogen bonds are weak, they are able to break apart easily and split when the molecule needs to be separated to bond with another DNA molecule for reproduction.