ttcgta, because A always bonds to T and G always bonds to C. I always remembered this because A and T are made of strait lines and G and C are curves
taacgggtac
A binds with T, G binds with C.Therefore the complementary strand for ATCGCATT would be TAGCGTAA.
It would be ATCAGT. A=T T=A G=C C=G for all the DNA sequences the complementary strand would be the opposite.
The complimentary DNA strand would be AGCTCTTAGAGCTAA.
The complementary strand to GCCATTG would be CGGTAAC. Adenine pairs with thymine and guanine pairs with cytosine in DNA strands.
The sequence would be GACGGT
The complementary strand for bases AAGCCA would be TTCGGT. In DNA, adenine pairs with thymine and guanine pairs with cytosine.
The complimentary strand of MRNA would be AAUUCCGG.
taacgggtac
A binds with T, G binds with C.Therefore the complementary strand for ATCGCATT would be TAGCGTAA.
It would be ATCAGT. A=T T=A G=C C=G for all the DNA sequences the complementary strand would be the opposite.
The complimentary DNA strand would be AGCTCTTAGAGCTAA.
The complementary strand to GCCATTG would be CGGTAAC. Adenine pairs with thymine and guanine pairs with cytosine in DNA strands.
the complimentary styrand would be: T-C-C-G-A-T
lol i hate this question........its in meh science book
The complementary strand to tagcaagc would be ATCGTTCG. In DNA, adenine (A) pairs with thymine (T), while cytosine (C) pairs with guanine (G). So, the complementary bases are matched accordingly to form the opposite strand.
If TACGTT is read 5'-TACGTT-3' then the complimentary strand will read 5'-AACGTA-3'. Since the template strand is traditionally written in the 5' to 3' direction then the complimentary strand, written in the same manner, would be AACGTA not ATGCAA. The four bases, adenine(A), thyamine(T), cytosin(C), and guanine(G) bond together in pairs. A - T, and C - G. They do not pair with any other base unless in the case of RNA, when thyamine is replaced with uracil.