cytosine
Guanine base pairs with cytosine in RNA through three hydrogen bonds.
Cytosine bonds with guanine through three hydrogen bonds.
The nitrogenous base, Cytosine, pairs with the nitrogenous base, Guanine.In DNA:Cytosine - GuanineAdenine - ThymineIn RNA:Cytosine - GuanineAdenine - Uracil
Guanine bonds with cytosine through three hydrogen bonds, forming a stable base pair in the DNA double helix.
Cytosine binds [bonds] with Guanine.
Cytosine, a pyrimidine (sugar) base, pairs with Guanine, a purine (nitrogen) base.
Its complementary base is guanine
guanine
adenine bonds to thymine cytosine bonds to guanine. (In RNA adenine bonds to uracil)
Guanine bonds to Cytosine in DNA through three hydrogen bonds. It also bonds to a Deoxyribose molecule in the backbone of the DNA molecule.
Guanine-cytosine forms three hydrogen bonds, while adenine-thymine forms two hydrogen bonds. Therefore, guanine-cytosine forms more hydrogen bonds.
In nucleic acids, the base that pairs with guanine is cytosine.