A-T and C-G
a pair of nitrogenous bases,consisting of a purine linked by hydrozen bonds to a pyrimidine that connects the complementary strands . the base pair are adenine,thymine,cytosine & guanine in DNA & uracil in place of thymine in RNA.
As the DNA molecule unwinds during replication, complementary nucleotides pair with the exposed bases on one of the DNA strands, forming base pairs through hydrogen bonding (adenine with thymine and cytosine with guanine). This pairing is facilitated by the enzyme DNA polymerase, which adds nucleotides to the growing complementary strand. The result is the formation of two identical DNA molecules, each consisting of one original strand and one newly synthesized strand. This process is essential for accurate DNA replication and cell division.
Yes because the bases pair uniquely when the strands are joined together.
Adenine pairs with thymine. and Guanine pairs with cytosine.
Complementary base pair
DNA is a molecule that consists of two complementary strands, which are held together by hydrogen bonding between nucleotide bases. The bases on one strand pair with the bases on the other strand in a specific manner: adenine with thymine and guanine with cytosine.
The base sequence for the complementary DNA would be GCA AT. Since DNA strands are complementary, the bases pair as follows: A with T, T with A, C with G, and G with C.
The new strand is complementary to the original strand. This means that the bases on the new strand pair with the bases on the original strand according to the rules of base pairing (A with T and G with C).
cytosine and guanine
A basepair is a pair of nucleotides on opposite complementary DNA or RNA strands which are connected via hydrogen bonds.
Both strands of DNA made of nucleotides come together and start making a helix which makes the bases pair up while the DNA strands are being twisted around like the helix. In the canonical Watson-Crick DNA base pairing, adenine (A) forms a base pair with thymine (T) and guanine (G) forms a base pair with cytosine (C).
phospo-di-ester bond
A basepair is a pair of nucleotides on opposite complementary DNA or RNA strands which are connected via hydrogen bonds.
The bases attach to each strand, then pair up with the correct bases from a supply found in the cytoplasm.The order of the new base pairs will match the order of the original DNA before it separated.
a pair of nitrogenous bases,consisting of a purine linked by hydrozen bonds to a pyrimidine that connects the complementary strands . the base pair are adenine,thymine,cytosine & guanine in DNA & uracil in place of thymine in RNA.
Within the Dna double helix molecule Adenosine hydrogen binds only with Thymine while Cytosine hydrogen binds only with Guanine.
As the DNA molecule unwinds during replication, complementary nucleotides pair with the exposed bases on one of the DNA strands, forming base pairs through hydrogen bonding (adenine with thymine and cytosine with guanine). This pairing is facilitated by the enzyme DNA polymerase, which adds nucleotides to the growing complementary strand. The result is the formation of two identical DNA molecules, each consisting of one original strand and one newly synthesized strand. This process is essential for accurate DNA replication and cell division.