G-A-T-T-A-G-C-C-T-A-A-G-G-T-C-G
DNA base-pairing rules
Adenine - Thymine
Cytosine - Guanine
RNA base-pairing rules
Adenine - Uracil
Cytosine - Guanine
The complementary strand for CGATTAC would be GCTAATG. C and G are always paired together, and A and T are always paired together.
A binds with T, G binds with C. Therefore the complementary strand of ATG-CCC-TAT-AGC-GCG-CAA-AGA-G is: TAC-GGG-ATA-TCG-CGC-GTT-TCT-C
If a DNA strand read CCTAGCT, its mRNA would read GGAUCGA.
The complement DNA strand to "gtattcttcaagagatcgg" is "ccgatctcttgaagaatac". This is achieved by replacing each nucleotide with its complementary base: A with T, T with A, C with G, and G with C.
Each of these letters stands for a base (which is part of one nucleotide). Therefore because there are 12 bases, there would be 12 nucleotides in the strand.
It would be T-A-A-G-C-C
The base sequence on the complementary DNA strand will be GCATCC. In DNA, adenine (A) pairs with thymine (T), and cytosine (C) pairs with guanine (G). Therefore, for each base in the original sequence CGTAGG, the complementary bases are as follows: C pairs with G, G pairs with C, T pairs with A, A pairs with T, G pairs with C, and G pairs with C again.
The complementary base sequence of a DNA strand is formed by pairing adenine (A) with thymine (T) and cytosine (C) with guanine (G). For the template strand TTGCACG, the complementary sequence would be AACGTGC.
DNA:T-C-G-A-TmRNA:U-C-G-A-UmRNA rule: switch T with U_________________________________________Although the above answer is correct in that there are no thymines (T) in RNA, I must disagree with the rest of the answer. The mRNA strand given in the answer above would be the identical strand made from RNA, not the complementary strand as the question asked for.A complementary strand is produced by an RNA or DNA polymerase from a template DNA strand.Therefore, if the template DNA strand were T-C-G-A-T, then:The complementary DNA strand would be A-G-C-T-AThe complementary RNA strand would be A-G-C-U-A
The complementary sequence of a DNA strand is written with the beginning letters of the bases: adenine (A), cytosine (C), guanine (G), and thymine (T). You would replace each letter with its complementary nucleotide. Replace: A for T T for A C for G G for C
The sequence of nucleotides of the complementary strand will be the nucleotides which bind to the nucleotides of the template. In DNA, adenine binds to thymine and cytosine binds to guanine. The complementary strand will therefore have an adenine where the template strand has a thymine, a guanine where the template has a cytosine, etc. For example: If the template strand is ATG-GGC-CTA-GCT Then the complementary strand would be TAC-CCG-GAT-CGA
TGCA
To indicate the sequence of the template strand based on the nontemplate strand (5' ATGGGGCGC 3'), you need to determine the complementary bases and reverse the direction. The complementary bases are: T for A, C for G, and G for C. Therefore, the template strand sequence will be 3' TACCCCGCG 5'.
The DNA base pairing rules are A-T and C-G, so the complementary strand to TAGTCA is ATCAGT.
The complementary sequence to GAATGC is CTTACG. In DNA, adenine pairs with thymine, so if one strand has a guanine (G), the complementary strand will have a cytosine (C); and if one strand has an adenine (A), the complementary strand will have a thymine (T).
The complementary base pairing rule for DNA and mRNA is: A pairs with U, T pairs with A, G pairs with C, and C pairs with G. Therefore, the mRNA complementary strand for the DNA sequence TTAAGGCC would be AAUUCCGG.
To determine the base sequence on the complementary DNA strand, you need to know the base sequence of one strand. DNA is composed of four bases: adenine (A), thymine (T), cytosine (C), and guanine (G). The complementary base pairing rules state that A pairs with T and C pairs with G. For example, if the given strand is 5'-ATCG-3', the complementary strand would be 3'-TAGC-5'.