asked 8.6k views
14 votes
What are the two kinds of pyrimidines found in dna?.

2 Answers

6 votes

Answer:

Cytosine and Thymine

Step-by-step explanation:

Of the four DNA bases, (C, T, A and G), C and T are pyrimidines. The way I remember it is, C, U (which is only in RNA) and T are "pyrimidines", which has more than 3 syllables, hence there are 3 bases in this category, as compared to purines which only contain 2 (A and G). Hope that helps and it's not confusing

answered
User Irfanullah Jan
by
9.0k points
14 votes

Answer:

DNA are cytosine and thymine

Step-by-step explanation:

in RNA, they are cytosine and uracil. Purines are larger than pyrimidines because they've a two-ring shape whilst pyrimidines simplest have a unmarried ring.

answered
User DNR
by
8.2k points
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