The nucleotide "A" base pairs with the nucleotide "T", Similarly, the nucleotide "C" base pairs with the nucleotide "G", and in the same way, The nucelotides "T" and "G" base pairs with nucleotides "A"and "C" respectively. The complementary nucleotide sequence is thus the base pair with which it forms a double-stranded structue of the DNA, for example the complementary sequence for "ACGTTTA" is "TGCAAAT".
Transcription is the process in which DNA is used as a template to create a complementary mRNA strand. During transcription, an enzyme called RNA polymerase binds to the DNA and reads the sequence of nucleotide bases. It then synthesizes a strand of mRNA by matching complementary RNA bases to the DNA bases. This results in the creation of a single-stranded mRNA molecule that carries the genetic information from the DNA.
These nucleotide sequences are called anticodons.
No, the two strands of DNA are not identical to each other. They are complementary and have opposite sequences of nucleotide bases.
The complementary DNA strand to TAC-CGG-AGT is ATG-GCC-TCA. In DNA, adenine pairs with thymine (A-T) and cytosine pairs with guanine (C-G), so the complementary strand is created by matching these base pairs.
The nucleotide sequences in the two chains of a DNA molecule are complementary.This means that A (adenine) in one chain always binds to T (thymine) in the other, and C (cytosine) always binds to G (guanine).So if the sequence in one chain is:AATCTGGAthe complementary sequence in the other chain will be:TTAGACCT
DNA Polymerase
A matching strand of DNA to the sequence AGTAAC would be its complementary strand, which consists of the bases that pair with each nucleotide. In DNA, adenine (A) pairs with thymine (T), and guanine (G) pairs with cytosine (C). Therefore, the complementary strand to AGTAAC would be TCATTG.
RNA polymerase is the enzyme that reads along a sequence of bases in DNA and synthesizes a complementary sequence of nucleotide bases in RNA during transcription.
The complementary sequence of a DNA strand is written with the beginning letters of the bases: adenine (A), cytosine (C), guanine (G), and thymine (T). You would replace each letter with its complementary nucleotide. Replace: A for T T for A C for G G for C
DNA polymerase is responsible for assembling complementary nucleotide bases during DNA replication. It adds nucleotides to the growing DNA strand using the existing strand as a template.
Correct match for CTAGG is.... GATCC ;)
DNA makes copies of itself through the process of replication. Because the nucleotide bases are complementary, they automatically make the other strand of complementary bases when the division of the cell occurs.
The complementary nucleotide sequence of ccgagattg is ggctctaac.
Transcription is the process in which DNA is used as a template to create a complementary mRNA strand. During transcription, an enzyme called RNA polymerase binds to the DNA and reads the sequence of nucleotide bases. It then synthesizes a strand of mRNA by matching complementary RNA bases to the DNA bases. This results in the creation of a single-stranded mRNA molecule that carries the genetic information from the DNA.
These nucleotide sequences are called anticodons.
No, the two strands of DNA are not identical to each other. They are complementary and have opposite sequences of nucleotide bases.
There are three nucleotide Bases for each codon, so the Answer is 72 bases.