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 .
A,C,T,G "A" and "T" always pair "C", "G" always pair
The pyrimidine cytosine (C) always pairs with the purine guanine (G) so there must always be equal amount of both in DNA.
T-A C-G
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
The complementary strand for CGATTAC would be GCTAATG. C and G are always paired together, and A and T are always paired together.
The other side is TGCGAA. This is because A always binds with T and C always binds with G since DNA strands that are connected together are always complimentary.
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
In DNA strands, C pairs with G and A pairs with T. The complementary strand to C-C-A-T-C-G would be G-G-T-A-C.
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
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.