Erwin Chargaff's discovery that DNA contains equimolar amounts of guanine and cytosine and also equimolar amounts of

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Erwin Chargaff's discovery that DNA contains equimolar amounts of guanine and cytosine and also equimolar amounts of adenine and thymine has come to be known as Chargaff's rule:
G = C and A = T
(a) Does Chargaff's rule imply that equal amounts of guanine and adenine are present in DNA? That is, does G = A?
(b) Does Chargaff's rule imply that the sum of the purine residues equals the sum of the pyrimidine residues? That is, does A + G = C + T?
(c) Does Chargaff's rule apply only to double-stranded DNA, or would it also apply to each individual strand if the double helical strand were separated into its two complementary strands?
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Organic Chemistry

ISBN: 978-0321768414

8th edition

Authors: L. G. Wade Jr.

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