Adenine, Guamine, Thymine and Cytosine
Yes. Indeed, while the Exterior of DNA is the sugar-phosphate backbone, the Interior of the DNA double-helix is where the [nucleotide] bases reside.
Since it is found in the body, it has to do with something that builds the body up. Also it has to do with DNA and RNA.
The transforming principle contain DNA.
DNA
between the nitrogen bases of the two strands of DNA
The four nitrogenous bases in in DNA are adenine, thymine, cytosine, and guanine.
Adenine, Thymine, Guanine, Cytosine
DNA contain adenine , guanine, thymine and cytosin . A -T , G-C
Both DNA and RNA each contain the bases adenine, cytosine, and guanine. They differ in that DNA contains thymine whereas RNA contains uracil.
the structure of DNA allows DNA to contain information.The order of the bases on one side of DNA is a code that carries information
DNA polymerase is an enzyme that helps catalyze the polymerization of DNA bases (deoxyribonucleotides) into a DNA strand.
That depends on the particular sample of DNA.
DNA sequences contain the nitrogen bases adenine, thymine, cytosine, and guanine. RNA sequences contain the nitrogen bases adenine, uracil, cytosine, and guanine. If the sequence contains thymine it is a DNA sequence if it contains uracil it is an RNA sequence.
No, DNA is a nucleic acid which is made up of deoxyribose sugar, phosophate and nitrogenous bases. However, chromosomes contain both DNA and proteins.
DNA and RNA both contain in all four nitrogen bases. classified into purines and pyrimidines. DNA and RNA in common have Thymine, cytosine and Guanine as the three nitrogen bases. DNA has adenine and instead of adenine RNA has uracil as the fourth nitrogen base.
DNA and RNA contain purine and pyrimidine nitrogenous bases, one benzoic acid radicle and one pentose.
It contains the bases Adenine, Guanine, Cytosine, and Uracil in place of Thymine (on DNA) and the sugar in RNA is Ribose.