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Concerning nucleotides, A always pairs with T (or U in Rna) and C always binds with G: C is said to be complementary with G.
z remains undefined.
The fifth note of C major scale is G. The fifth note of any scale is always called the dominant.
The values of f and g are equal at each point in the domainThe domains of f and g are equal
33% are A, then 33% are T... because they pair up in equal quantities, 50/50.So, 66% total are made up of both A and T, together.That leaves 34% for the remaining C and G components...... which also come in equal quantities, 50/50.So 17% go to G and 17% go to C
In 1949 Chargaff proposed several rules. Which are as follows;the total number of purine nucleotide(A+G) is equal to the total number of pyrimidine nucleotide(C+T),i.e.(A+G)/C+T)=1;A+G+T+C=1(in terms of molecular fraction)the amount of adenine (A) is always equal to the thymine(T):A=T or A/T=1the amount of guanine (G) is always equal to the cytosine(C):G=C or G/C=1in the bases constitute of DNA ,the number of 6-amino group is equal to the number of 6-keto groups;G+T=A+Tthe numbers (A+T) and (G+C) are the only variables .
The pyrimidine cytosine (C) always pairs with the purine guanine (G) so there must always be equal amount of both in DNA.
A,C,T,G "A" and "T" always pair "C", "G" always pair
You just need to switch G with C and T with A. Thymine and Adenine are always bonded together. Guanine and Cytosine are always bonded together. They would be switch so the nucleotide sequence would be. C-G-A-T-T-A-G-G-C
T-A C-G
The complementary strand for CGATTAC would be GCTAATG. C and G are always paired together, and A and T are always paired together.
The complementary strand for A-C-G-C-T-T would be T-G-C-G-A-A. Adenine pairs with thymine, cytosine pairs with guanine in DNA strands.
Yes, the amount of cytosine in both strands of a DNA molecule is equal. This is because cytosine always pairs with guanine through hydrogen bonding in a complementary manner: C-G on one strand pairs with G-C on the other strand.
a piano always starts on c
B. G-G-A-T-G-C is the complement strand to C-C-A-T-C-G. The complementary base pairs are as follows: C-G, C-G, A-T, T-A, C-G, G-C.
Yes, A and T are always paired up together. When DNA replicated, adenine and thymine always pair up. However, it's been proven that there is a very very small percentage of extra C, meaning that C and G don't completely pair up because there is about a 0.8% more percentage of C than G. No scientist has been able to prove how or why, though. Basically, A and T always pair up. Same with C and G, there is just a little bit more of C than G.
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