they are the same because all nuclotides have pairs.they difer in there nitrogen containing bases
the all have the cell membrane.
All nucleotides contain a phosphate group and a sugar molecule (ribose or deoxyribose), which form the backbone of the nucleotide. The nitrogenous base is the part that varies between nucleotides, with adenine, thymine, cytosine, and guanine being the four different bases found in DNA nucleotides. In RNA nucleotides, thymine is replaced by uracil.
Although DNA is composed of the same four nucleotides in all organisms, the sequence of nucleotides is different for each species
Yes
well 100
they use the same set of nucleotides.
they use the same set of nucleotides.
they use the same set of nucleotides.
Yes, all living organisms share the same four nucleotides that make up DNA: adenine, thymine, cytosine, and guanine. The unique arrangement and quantity of these nucleotides in an organism's DNA are what determine its genetic characteristics and differences from other organisms. These variations in DNA sequence and content contribute to the diversity seen among different species.
No - genes are the parts of DNA that code for a functional product (such as a protein). There are other parts of the DNA which are not genes.
they use the same set of nucleotides.
they all use the same set of nucleotides.