In DNA, adenine pairs with Thymine
In RNA, adenine pairs with Uracil
The code letters are A, T, G, C, which stand for adenine, thymine, guanine, and cytosine. These four chemicals create DNA.
In DNA molecules, thymine always pairs with adenine. In RNA molecules, uracil always pairs with adenine.
A goes with T.
G with C.
In RNA T is replaced by U, uracil.
Thymine
thymine
Uracil. In normal DNA it would be Thymine, but in RNA Uracil becomes the base pair for Adenine.
Uracil.
Guanine and cytosine because they are held together by three hydrogen bonds while adenine and thymine are held together by 2.
DNA: Adenine - Thymine Guanine - Cytosine RNA (URACIL REPLACES THYMINE!): Adenine - Uracil Guanine - Cytosine
adenine
Uracil. In normal DNA it would be Thymine, but in RNA Uracil becomes the base pair for Adenine.
Adenine.
Adenine is a nucleotide base. These pair with other complimentary nucleotide bases. Therefore Adenine could not pair with another Adenine as they have the same shape, not a complimentary shape.
In DNA: Thymine pairs with Adenine. In RNA: Uracil pairs with Adenine.
thymine
Adenines base pair in RNA is uracil.
Uracil. In normal DNA it would be Thymine, but in RNA Uracil becomes the base pair for Adenine.
Uracil. In normal DNA it would be Thymine, but in RNA Uracil becomes the base pair for Adenine.
Uracil.
The phosphate base that pairs with Adenine in RNA is Uracil. In a DNA strand Adenine would pair with Thymine.
No. Adenine doesn't even usually pair with Cytosine. If you're talking about DNA, Adenine pairs with Thymine and Cytosine pairs with Guanine. A with T, C with G. This is only a general rule, however- Adenine and Cytosine can pair if you have a wobble base pair.