guanine
Hydrogen bonds hold the nitrogenous bases together in a strand of DNA. These bonds form between complementary base pairs: adenine with thymine, and guanine with cytosine.
Sorry i don't really know. Ask someone from your family...
There are two types of hydrogen bonds found in a molecule of DNA: adenine-thymine and cytosine-guanine base pairs. These hydrogen bonds are responsible for the complementary pairing of the nitrogenous bases in DNA strands.
(Adenine and Thymine) or (Guanine and Cytosine) are the respective molecules which join by hydrogen bond to attach to the double strand of DNA.
The nitrogenous bases in DNA are connected by hydrogen bonds. Specifically, adenine pairs with thymine through two hydrogen bonds, while cytosine pairs with guanine through three hydrogen bonds. These hydrogen bonds are crucial for maintaining the structure of the DNA double helix and ensuring the stability of base pairing.
Nitrogenous bases in DNA bond together through hydrogen bonds. Adenine pairs with thymine and guanine pairs with cytosine, forming stable base pairs within the DNA double helix.
Hydrogen bonds form between the nitrogenous bases of a DNA molecule. These hydrogen bonds connect adenine with thymine (or uracil in RNA) and guanine with cytosine, contributing to the double helix structure of DNA.
If the DNA nitrogenous bases (A&T, G&C) alone, its the Hydrogen bond. Phosphate-Sugar= phosphoester bond Sugar-Nitrogenous bases= Beta N-glycosidic bond Sugar-phosphate-sugar = phosphodiester bond
Hydrogen bonds hold the nitrogenous bases together in a strand of DNA. These bonds form between complementary base pairs: adenine with thymine, and guanine with cytosine.
Sorry i don't really know. Ask someone from your family...
There are two types of hydrogen bonds found in a molecule of DNA: adenine-thymine and cytosine-guanine base pairs. These hydrogen bonds are responsible for the complementary pairing of the nitrogenous bases in DNA strands.
(Adenine and Thymine) or (Guanine and Cytosine) are the respective molecules which join by hydrogen bond to attach to the double strand of DNA.
The nitrogenous bases in DNA are connected by hydrogen bonds. Specifically, adenine pairs with thymine through two hydrogen bonds, while cytosine pairs with guanine through three hydrogen bonds. These hydrogen bonds are crucial for maintaining the structure of the DNA double helix and ensuring the stability of base pairing.
The Cytosine, Guanine, Adenine and Thymine bases present in DNA are molecules that are held together by intermolecular hydrogen bonds. This bond occurs between an electronegative atom (known as a hydrogen bond acceptor) and a hydrogen atom attached to another electronegative atom (known as a hydrogen bond donor).
The 'steps' on the 'DNA Ladder' are made up of the four nitrogenous bases, Cytosine, Guanine, Thymine, and Adenine, while the pairing bases (Adenine & Thymine, Cytosine & Guanine) are bonded together with a hydrogen bond. The pairing bases (the 'rungs' of the ladder) are connected to the side posts of the ladder, which contain phosphate.
adenine and uracil and cytosine and guanine?
A weak hydrogen bond, adenine and thymine have a double hydrogen bond cytosine and guanine have a triple hydrogen bond