No.
Adenine binds to Thymine
Guanine binds to Cytosine
This means that the number of A=T and G=C
A + G = T + C - but the number of G and T can be different.
Yes because they always paired thymine with adenine or always paired adenine with thymine, never pairing either with cytosine or guanine. Therefore they are in equal amounts.
In DNA adenine pairs with thymine. In RNA adenine pairs with uracil.
Thymine will always bond with adenine, and guanine will always bind with cytosine.
Adenine pairs with thymine and guanine pairs with cytosine
the pairing is adanine with thymine and guanine with cytosine. the pairing is adanine with thymine and guanine with cytosine.
adenine In a DNA strand, the amount of Adenine equals the amount of Thymine, and the amount of Guanine equals the amount of Cytosine. So Adenine is your answer.
Yes because they always paired thymine with adenine or always paired adenine with thymine, never pairing either with cytosine or guanine. Therefore they are in equal amounts.
The nucleotide bases guanine and cytosine, and adenine and thymine are present in equal quantities in DNA. This is how scientists determined that guanine pairs with cytosine, and adenine pairs with thymine.
Adenine always pairs with thymine in a DNAmolecule.
Adenine always pairs with thymine Cytosine always pairs with guanine.
adenine with thymine cytosine with guanine adenine with uracil cytosine with guanine
The nitrogenous bases Adenine, Thymine, Guanine, and Cytosine Adenine and Thymine are always together and Cytosine and Guanine are always together.
There is no consistent amount of guanine in everyone's DNA, but there is an equal amount of guanine and cytosine as well equal amounts of thymine and adenine.
In DNA adenine pairs with thymine. In RNA adenine pairs with uracil.
thymine, cytosine, thymine, guanine, adenine *HINT* "A" goes with "T" always and "C" goes with "G" always
According to Chargaff's rules, the percentage of adenine is equal to thymine in a double-stranded DNA molecule. These rules state that in DNA, the amount of adenine is equal to the amount of thymine, and the amount of guanine is equal to the amount of cytosine.
Thymine will always bond with adenine, and guanine will always bind with cytosine.