Adenine (A) is one of the four nitrogenous bases in nucleic acids. It pairs with thymine (T) in DNA and with uracil (U) in RNA, following the base pairing rules that hold the two strands of DNA together.
Adenine (A) is a nitrogenous base, one of the five that show up across DNA and RNA. Under CED topic 1.6, every nucleotide monomer is built from three parts: a five-carbon sugar (deoxyribose in DNA, ribose in RNA), a phosphate group, and a nitrogenous base. Adenine is the base in that third slot for some of those nucleotides. Stringing nucleotides together in a specific order is how nucleic acids encode biological information.
What makes adenine matter is who it pairs with. In DNA, adenine pairs with thymine (T). In RNA, there's no thymine, so adenine pairs with uracil (U) instead. These are the base pairing rules, and they're the reason DNA can be copied accurately. The A on one strand tells you there's a T directly across from it, so each strand is a template for rebuilding the other.
Adenine lives in Unit 1: Chemistry of Life, specifically topic 1.6 Nucleic Acids, and it directly supports learning objective AP Bio 1.6.A: describe the structure and function of DNA and RNA. You can't explain how genetic information is stored or copied without the four bases, and adenine is one of them. The base pairing it does (A with T, A with U) is the structural feature that makes DNA replication and transcription possible. That connects Unit 1 forward to gene expression and inheritance later in the course, since the sequence of bases is the actual code being read.
Keep studying AP Biology Unit 1
Thymine (T) and Base Pairing Rule (Unit 1)
Adenine never works alone. In DNA it locks onto thymine through complementary base pairing, so knowing one base tells you the other. This is the rule that lets a cell rebuild a missing strand from its partner.
Uracil (U) (Unit 1)
RNA swaps thymine for uracil, so in RNA adenine pairs with uracil instead. Same base, different partner, depending on whether you're looking at DNA or RNA.
Messenger RNA (mRNA) (Unit 1)
When DNA is transcribed into mRNA, adenine on the DNA template is read and an mRNA base is matched to it. The base pairing that adenine does is how the genetic message gets copied from DNA into RNA.
Covalent Bond and the 3' end (Unit 1)
Adenine sits on a nucleotide, and nucleotides are joined by covalent bonds added to the 3' end of a growing strand. The base provides the matching; the sugar-phosphate backbone provides the structure that holds the chain together.
Adenine usually shows up inside questions about nucleic acid structure and base pairing rather than as a standalone topic. On multiple choice, you might see a stem give you a DNA or RNA sequence and ask for the complementary strand, where you apply A-T (or A-U in RNA). You could also be asked to label nucleotide components or identify which base belongs in DNA versus RNA. No released FRQ has used the word "adenine" by itself, but the base pairing logic behind it supports any free-response question asking you to explain how DNA stores or transmits information. Be ready to state the pairing rule and explain why complementary pairing makes accurate copying possible.
Adenine and uracil get confused because they're partners in RNA, but they are different bases. Adenine is present in both DNA and RNA. Uracil only appears in RNA, where it takes thymine's place as adenine's pairing partner. In DNA, adenine pairs with thymine, not uracil.
Adenine (A) is one of the four nitrogenous bases, and it sits on a nucleotide along with a five-carbon sugar and a phosphate group.
In DNA, adenine pairs with thymine (T); in RNA, adenine pairs with uracil (U).
These base pairing rules are what let DNA be copied accurately, since each strand can rebuild the other.
Adenine appears in both DNA and RNA, but its pairing partner changes depending on which one you're looking at.
This all falls under topic 1.6 in Unit 1 and supports learning objective AP Bio 1.6.A on the structure and function of DNA and RNA.
Adenine (A) is one of the four nitrogenous bases found in nucleic acids. It pairs with thymine in DNA and with uracil in RNA, and that complementary pairing is how genetic information gets copied and read.
Both, depending on the molecule. In DNA, adenine pairs with thymine (T). In RNA, there's no thymine, so adenine pairs with uracil (U) instead.
Yes. Adenine is present in both DNA and RNA. What changes is its partner: thymine in DNA, uracil in RNA.
Adenine and uracil are two different bases that pair with each other in RNA. Adenine shows up in both DNA and RNA, while uracil only appears in RNA, where it replaces thymine as adenine's partner.
Because adenine always pairs with thymine, knowing the base on one strand tells you the base directly across from it. That predictable pairing is what allows each DNA strand to act as a template for rebuilding the other.