Adenine and thymine are like best friends who always pair up when they meet.
Imagine you're building a tower with blocks. Each block has a special shape that only fits with another specific block. Adenine is like a red block, and thymine is like a blue block, they fit together perfectly to make a strong connection.
Adenine and thymine are two of the four letters in DNA’s alphabet (the other two are cytosine and guanine). These letters help our bodies remember how to grow, heal, and do all kinds of cool things.
How They Work Together
When DNA is copying itself, like when you're growing a new cell, adenine always finds thymine, and they hold hands (or in science words, they bond). This makes sure the copy is just as good as the original.
Think of it like a puzzle. If you have a red block on one side of the puzzle, you know there should be a blue block on the other side to match, that’s how adenine and thymine work together every time DNA copies itself!
Examples
- A teacher explains how adenine pairs with thymine, and cytosine pairs with guanine to make the rungs of a DNA ladder.
- A cartoon shows two strands of DNA twisting together as adenine matches with thymine.
Ask a question
See also
- What is Cytosine (C)?
- Why does RNA have Uracil and DNA have Thymine? Watch @nucleotides_org?
- How Does Transcription and Translation: From DNA to Protein Work?
- How Does DNA Replication (Updated) Work?
- Does DNA have the equivalent of IF-statements, WHILE loops, or function calls? How?