Its joined to the nucleic acid Adenine.
A quick way(but weird way) to memorize the nucleic acids is AT GrandCanyon.
Grand- Guanine, Canyon-Cytosine and A-Adenine, T-Thymine. Later you will learn about U-Uracil and how it matches Adenine, so here is the little head start.
Adenine joins with Thymine, Guanine joins with Cytosine
adenine is one of the 4 base pairs in a dna structure ,A and T(thymine), and C and G, simple !
They are not proteins, but rather nitrogen bases. They are cytosine, with joins with guanine, and thymine, which joins with adenine. These nitrogen bases form the 'rungs' of the double- helix shaped DNA.
Thymine
Thymine in DNA is replaced with uracil in RNA. Uracil pairs with adenine during transcription to RNA, similar to how thymine pairs with adenine in DNA.
No, RNA does not contain thymine. Thymine is a nitrogenous base found in DNA, but in RNA, thymine is replaced by uracil.
Adenine pairs with thymine.
No, thymine is not present in RNA. RNA contains uracil instead of thymine.
Thymine...
Thymine
Uracil replaces Thymine in RNA. Uracil can't be in DNA and Thymine can't be in RNA.
Thymine will always bond with adenine, and guanine will always bind with cytosine.