bn:00008801n
Noun Concept
Categories: Nucleic acids, Articles with short description, Nucleobases, Molecular genetics
EN
base pair  base pairing  Artificial DNA  base-pair  Base-paired
EN
One of the pairs of chemical bases joined by hydrogen bonds that connect the complementary strands of a DNA molecule or of an RNA molecule that has two strands; the base pairs are adenine with thymine and guanine with cytosine in DNA and adenine with uracil and guanine with cytosine in RNA WordNet 3.0
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EN
One of the pairs of chemical bases joined by hydrogen bonds that connect the complementary strands of a DNA molecule or of an RNA molecule that has two strands; the base pairs are adenine with thymine and guanine with cytosine in DNA and adenine with uracil and guanine with cytosine in RNA WordNet 3.0 & Open English WordNet
A base pair is a fundamental unit of double-stranded nucleic acids consisting of two nucleobases bound to each other by hydrogen bonds. Wikipedia
A pair of connected nucleotides on complementary DNA and RNA strands Wikipedia Disambiguation
Interacting selectively and non-covalently with nucleic acid via hydrogen bonds between the bases of a gene product molecule and the bases of a target nucleic acid molecule. Wikidata
Unit consisting of two nucleobases bound to each other by hydrogen bonds: either adenine–thymine or guanine–cytosine in natural DNA Wikidata
In molecular biology, two nucleotides on opposite complementary DNA or RNA strands that are connected via hydrogen bonds. Wiktionary
Molecular biology: two nucleotides on opposite complementary DNA or RNA strands. Wiktionary (translation)