Biology, asked by jyotiramsalunke9441, 10 months ago

The base pairs of DNA are correctly shown as
(a) A =T and C = G
(b) A = T and C = G
(c) A = T and C =G
(d) A = T and C = G

Answers

Answered by shriyapawle
0

Answer:

All options are the same mate !!!

Answered by laraibmukhtar55
0

Base pairs of DNA:

• Here are all options are same and correct i.e. A=T and C=G

• In DNA, there are four dissimilar bases: adenine (A) and guanine (G) are the greater purines. Cytosine (C) and thymine (T) are reduced pyrimidines.  

• Chargaff's rules state that DNA from any cell of any creature should have a 1:1 ratio (base Pair Rule) of pyrimidine and purine bases and, more precisely, that the extent of guanine should be equal to cytosine and the extent of adenine should be equal to thymine.

Hope it helped......

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