The ratios A to T and G to C are very important to the structure of DNA. A or Adenie only bonds with T or Thymine so there are almost always equal numbers in the structure. This is also true with C or cytosine and G or guanine.
The four bases found in DNA are:adenine (A)cytosine (C)guanine (G)thymine (T).
The bases are: Adenine[A] Guanine[G] Cytosine[C] Thymine[T]
There is no letter C in DNA or RNA .
DNA is double helical in structure. each spiral strand, composed of a sugar phosphate backbone and attached bases, is connected to a complementary strand by hydrogen bonding (non- covalent) between paired bases, adenine (A) with thymine (T) and guanine (G) with cytosine (C).
The complementary strand of this DNA sequence is... A T G C T A A C C
A to T, T to A, G to C, C to G
The nitrogen bases of DNA have letters A, C, G, T to represent it. B is absent in DNA
A goes with T and C goes with G
adenine (A)cytosine (C)guanine (G)thymine (T).
dna
DNA is composed of phosphate, proteins, nitogenous bases, sugar. they all maintain the structure of the DNA and are responsible for replicating the DNA accurately during replication.. for example; nitrogenous bases are correctly base paired i. e. A with T and G with C.
These four letters are abbreviation of four nucleotides that make up DNA.
The four bases found in DNA are:adenine (A)cytosine (C)guanine (G)thymine (T).
The bases are: Adenine[A] Guanine[G] Cytosine[C] Thymine[T]
They correspond to the six possible ratios of two sides of a right triangle: a/b, a/c, b/a, b/c, c/a & c/b.
The ratios a/b and c/d [ or a:b and c:d ] are equal if (and only if) a*d = b*c
Joseph L. Svirbely, Albert Szent-Gyorgyi, and Charles Glen King