DNA
2006-07-28 10:46:01
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answer #1
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answered by The Drunken Fool 7
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They are the four bases of Deoxyriboenucleic Acid or DNA - Cytosine, Thymine, Guanine and Adenine. You should have also used the formula for the phosphate ion links - PO4, and ribose, a pentose sugar, C5H10O5, both of which form the 'spines' of the double helix strand. For completeness you should have thrown in Uracil, C4H4N2O2, which replaces thymine in Ribonucleic Acid or RNA.
2006-07-28 18:01:11
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answer #2
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answered by drrwalker2003 3
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C5H5N5 IS THE CHEMICAL RATIO FORMULA FOR COW ADENINE
C5H6N2O2 IS THE CHEMICAL RATIO FORMULA, FOR DOG THYMINE
C5H5N5O is a crystalline substance (contained in guano. It is
also a constituent of the liver, pancreas, and other glands in mammals.
A pyrimidine (C4H5N3O) which is one of the four major basic
components of DNA and RNA in most organisms, forming
glyosides with ribose and deoxyribose. It is the basic
component of cytidine, deoxycytidine, cytosine, cytidine
monophosphate, and derivatives of those compounds
Looks like you are some sort of animal................
2006-07-28 17:49:57
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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Adenine - A purine base, C5H5N5, present in all living cells, mainly as a subunit of nucleic acids
Thymine - A white crystalline pyrimidine base, C5H6N2O2 which occurs in DNA and is one of the four main units upon which the genetic code is based.
Guanine - A purine base, C5H5N5O, present in all living cells, mainly in combined form, as in nucleic acids.
Cytosine - A pyrimidine base, C4H5N3O, present in living cells, mainly in combined form, as in nucleic acids.
2006-07-28 17:51:39
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answer #4
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answered by jeki_dslo 4
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hmmm...The building blocks of life.
(or LIFE)
Adenine ( C5H5N5 ), Thymine ( C5H6N2O2 ), Guanine ( C5H5ON5 ) and Cytosine ( C4H5N3O ) are the basis of all living matter.
They are in the genetic code (DNA)
There is a split in them...could it be:
'split genes' (Split Jeans)
(or perhaps the break in life - ''a mid-life crisis''??) This Q is tough..
2006-07-31 02:59:40
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answer #5
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answered by X-Ray 4
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I need more information to answer that question. Those elements could form any number of structures.
2006-07-28 17:46:14
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answer #6
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answered by DJ 2
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HOW ABOUT ASKING THAT IN THE SCIENCE SECTION? You'd get more & better answers.
2006-07-28 20:19:15
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answer #7
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answered by mani boo/poo 2
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confusing
2006-07-28 17:50:23
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answer #8
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answered by angelcake 5
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einstein
2006-07-28 18:56:08
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answer #9
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answered by zaazzy 4
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I have no idea what your on about be more precise.Thank You
2006-07-28 17:52:27
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answer #10
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answered by Ollie 7
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alphanumericaly mixed up?
2006-07-28 17:46:38
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answer #11
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answered by tom p 2
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