No it contains uracil instead.
There are only 4 nucleotides ever used in RNA and those are A,G,C,U. There are some cases in where post-transcriptional modification of RNA will allow the enzymes to modify certain nucleotides from U to T. But any primary RNA that is produced will not contain any Thymine.
No, mRNA does not contain thymine in its nucleotide sequence. Instead, mRNA contains uracil in place of thymine.
mRNA contains uracil in its nucleotide sequence, not thymine.
mRNA uses uracil in its genetic code, not thymine.
Uracil pairs with adenine in mRNA and replaces thymine in the DNA strand during transcription.
No, RNA does not contain thymine. Thymine is a nitrogenous base found in DNA, but in RNA, thymine is replaced by uracil.
No, mRNA does not contain thymine in its nucleotide sequence. Instead, mRNA contains uracil in place of thymine.
mRNA contains uracil in its nucleotide sequence, not thymine.
uracil but that's in rna its thymine in DNA
mRNA uses uracil in its genetic code, not thymine.
It will use adenine, but thymine will be replaced by a nitrogen base called "uracil" in mRNA
Uracil replaces Thymine as a base in mRNA.
Uracil pairs with adenine in mRNA and replaces thymine in the DNA strand during transcription.
Thymine.
Uracil
No, RNA does not contain thymine. Thymine is a nitrogenous base found in DNA, but in RNA, thymine is replaced by uracil.
RNA does not contain thymine; thymine is exclusively found in DNA.
Yes, mRNA uses uracil in its genetic code instead of thymine.