Erwin Chargaff's work on the composition of nucleic acids began in 1944. His findings, which later became known as
Chargaff's rules, detail the specific pairings that occur in double-stranded DNA molecules.
According to one of Chargaff's rules, a section of DNA molecule that contains 50 base pairs and has 15 adenine
bases must also contain
a- 15 guanine bases
b- 15 cytosine bases
c- 15 thymine bases
d- 15 uracil bases
Chargaff's rules, detail the specific pairings that occur in double-stranded DNA molecules.
According to one of Chargaff's rules, a section of DNA molecule that contains 50 base pairs and has 15 adenine
bases must also contain
a- 15 guanine bases
b- 15 cytosine bases
c- 15 thymine bases
d- 15 uracil bases