Thymine (enol) pairs with adenine in DNA.
Thymine can pair with adenine in DNA, while uracil can pair with adenine in RNA.
Uracil. In normal DNA it would be Thymine, but in RNA Uracil becomes the base pair for Adenine.
In DNA replication, adenine binds with thymine. In RNA, adenine binds with uracil.
The guanine-cytosine base pair is harder to break than the adenine-thymine base pair due to the presence of three hydrogen bonds between guanine and cytosine, compared to two hydrogen bonds between adenine and thymine. This makes the guanine-cytosine pair more stable and stronger.
Adenine always pairs with thymine Cytosine always pairs with guanine.
Thymine is the complementary base pair for adenine in DNA.
It is not a DNA base pair itself, it is a DNA nucleotide base. It does however, form a base pair when bonded with adenine.
In DNA: Thymine pairs with Adenine. In RNA: Uracil pairs with Adenine.
Adenine pairs with thymine.
Thymine base pairs with adenine in DNA, forming a T-A base pair. Uracil base pairs with adenine in RNA, forming a U-A base pair.
Adenine pairs with thymine in DNA through hydrogen bonds, forming a complementary base pair.
The base on one strand pair with the base on the other strand, adenine with thymine, and cytosine with guanine, they join together by hydrogen bonds. Parent
Uracil (U) is not found in DNA and is replaced by thymine (T) in DNA molecules. Uracil is found in RNA instead of thymine.
Thymine can pair with adenine in DNA, while uracil can pair with adenine in RNA.
Guanine-Cytosine and Adenine-Thymine
Thymine, and Cytosine matches with Guanine
In DNA the base pairs are Adenine with Thymine and Guanine with Cytosine. In RNA Thymine is replaced by Uracil so the base pairs are Adenine with Uracil and Guanine with Cytosine.