Adenine pairs with thymine in DNA and with uracil in RNA.
Adenine is the purine base that pairs up with thymine in DNA and with uracil in RNA.
Thymine in DNA is replaced with uracil in RNA. Uracil pairs with adenine during transcription to RNA, similar to how thymine pairs with adenine in DNA.
Thymine
Adenine always pairs with thymine in DNA and with uracil in RNA.
In DNA the base pairs are Adenine with Thymine and Guanine with Cytosine. In RNA Thymine is replaced by Uracil so the base pairs are Adenine with Uracil and Guanine with Cytosine.
Adenine pairs with thymine in DNA and with uracil in RNA.
Thymine
Thymine in DNA Uracil in RNA
Adenine is the purine base that pairs up with thymine in DNA and with uracil in RNA.
Thymine in DNA is replaced with uracil in RNA. Uracil pairs with adenine during transcription to RNA, similar to how thymine pairs with adenine in DNA.
In DNA the base pairs are Adenine with Thymine and Guanine with Cytosine. In RNA Thymine is replaced by Uracil so the base pairs are Adenine with Uracil and Guanine with Cytosine.
Adenine in DNA pairs with thymine, and in RNA it pairs with uracil.
Adenine pairs with thymine.
In RNA, adenine base pairs with uracil, not thymine as in DNA. This forms an A-U base pair, where adenine and uracil are complementary bases.
The base thymine is replaced by a structurally similar base called uracil. Uracil pairs with adenine in RNA instead of thymine, which pairs with adenine in DNA.
In DNA thymine is one of the nitrogen bases, but in RNA uracil replaces thymine still leaving four nitrogen bases