T, g
c, a
Hydrogen bonding exist b/w the nitrogenous bases hydrogen bonding is a wk bonding but during replication it is easy to break the bonding and open the starnds
Purines bond to pyrimidines
hydrogen bonds
Another answer could be that Transcription uses Uracil. This is the answer I got from Apex btw.
Among many things an RNA primer for DNA replication.
Nitrogenous bases are held together by hydrogen bonds, thus making them easier to separate during DNA replication.
Hydrogen bonding exist b/w the nitrogenous bases hydrogen bonding is a wk bonding but during replication it is easy to break the bonding and open the starnds
chromosomal defect
There are four bases in a DNA "ladder"... It is called a ladder because of the "two sides" and the bases... In DNA replication, they obviously replicate and the two sides are replicated as are the bases. (A,T,C,G)
Base pairing refers to the pairing of complimentary nitrogen bases, either during DNA replication, or transcription and translation. In DNA, the bases adenine and thymine pair together, and guanine and cytosine pair together. In RNA, the base uracil takes the place of the base thymine. The bases that pair together are said to be complimentary to each other.
Purines bond to pyrimidines
DNA Polymerase
There are 4 parts of technology that are used to replication. The 4 levels are storage, database, record bases and statement based.
Replication.
hydrogen in bases
DNA Polymerase
(Apex) It breaks apart the bases.