There are several types of nitrogenous bases. The nitrogen bases that existÊare: thymine, uracil, adenine,Êand also guanine. These are often found in both DNA and RNA.
In DNAadenine & thyminecytosine & guanineIn RNAadenine & uracilcytosine & guanine
No. Alanine is an amino acid and cytosine is a nitrogenous base.
I'm unclear what you mean. Cysteine is an amino acid and never found in DNA. Do you mean cytosine? If you do, cytosine is not directly linked to phosphates - rather cytosine is linked to deoxyribose which in turn is linked to the phosphate group.
an enzyme unzips a DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) molecule and a ribosome reads it and matches up the nitrogen bases. (ademine to thymine; cytosine to guanine; and vice versa)
The mRNA base sequence cytosine-cytosine-uracil (CCU) corresponds to the amino acid proline. In the genetic code, each set of three nucleotides, known as a codon, specifies a particular amino acid, and CCU is one of the codons that codes for proline.
The nucleotides found are adenylic acid, guanylic acid, cytidylic acid and thymidylic acid. the nitrogen bases are : adenine, cytosine, guanosine and thymine.
Nitric Acid
In the RNA, the nitrogen bases are: (A) Adenine (U) Uracil (G) Guanine (C) Cytosine In the DNA, the nitrogen bases are: (A) Adenine (G) Guanine (C) Cytosine (T) Thymine
In DNAadenine & thyminecytosine & guanineIn RNAadenine & uracilcytosine & guanine
The sequence of 3 nitrogen bases on tRNA is called an anticodon. It is complementary to the mRNA codon during translation. The anticodon pairs with the mRNA codon to ensure the correct amino acid is added to the growing polypeptide chain.
Nitrogen is found in the atmosphere as diatomic nitrogen gas (N2), which makes up about 78% of Earth's atmosphere.
No. Alanine is an amino acid and cytosine is a nitrogenous base.
It's found in amino acid and nucleic acid
Nitrogen is found in organic molecules such as amino acids, nucleic acids (DNA and RNA), and proteins.
I'm unclear what you mean. Cysteine is an amino acid and never found in DNA. Do you mean cytosine? If you do, cytosine is not directly linked to phosphates - rather cytosine is linked to deoxyribose which in turn is linked to the phosphate group.
Yes, nitrogen is used in making nitric acid, HNO3.
the elements found in nitrogen, hydrogen and oxygen