Complementary strand: Difference between revisions

From The School of Biomedical Sciences Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Created page with "Mammalian DNA consists of two strands. These are know to be complementary following the Watson Crick base pairing rule, A-T and C-G. For example if the top strand reads AGG..."
 
Nnjm2 (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
 
Line 1: Line 1:
Mammalian DNA consists of two strands. These are know to be complementary following the Watson Crick base pairing rule, A-T and C-G.
Mammalian [[DNA|DNA]] consists of two strands. These are know to be complementary following the [[Watson-Crick_base_pairing|Watson Crick base pairing rule]], A-T and C-G.  


For example if the top strand reads AGGTTCAG the bottom strand must read TCCAAGTC. This is complementary as it follows the base pairing rules.
For example if the top strand reads AGGTTCAG the bottom strand must read TCCAAGTC. This is complementary as it follows the base pairing rules.

Latest revision as of 08:57, 15 October 2014

Mammalian DNA consists of two strands. These are know to be complementary following the Watson Crick base pairing rule, A-T and C-G.

For example if the top strand reads AGGTTCAG the bottom strand must read TCCAAGTC. This is complementary as it follows the base pairing rules.