Science, asked by abeab, 1 year ago

are the always going to be an equal number of adenine and thymine nucleotides in a molecules ? why?

Answers

Answered by seema3269
136

Answer:

yes because of chargaff rule which say adenine=thymine and guanine=cytosine

Answered by KomalSrinivas
99

Answer:

Explanation:

The answer to this question is "yes". The total number of adenine molecules or their pair is same with that of the number of thymine nucleotide in molecules.

This is mainly due to the chemical structure. in case of a DNA replication, the adenine and the thymine i.e the A and the T that gets paired up. however it might not b exact same in number an there might b an extra C factor in number. This might range to about 07-0.8 percent. This is because of the fact that it has never been possible to pair  this C with A or T.

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