Answer:
Sample A: 21.3%A, 28.7% G and 28.7% C
Sample B: 27.7% A, 22.3% G and 22.3% C
Explanation:
According to Chargaff's rules of base pairing, the amount of adenine in a DNA molecule equals the amount of thymine, and the amount of G=C.
<u>Sample A</u>
Contains 21.3% T, so it also contains 21.3% A. Therefore A+T= 42.6%
100% - (A+T) = (G+C)
100% - 42.6% = 57.4%
G+C add up to 57.4% of the DNA in sample A. And because G=C, there's 28.7% G and 28.7% C.
<u>Sample B</u>
Contains 27.7% T, so it also contains 27.7% A. Therefore A+T= 55.4%
100% - 55.4% = 44.6%
G+C add up to 44.6% of the DNA in sample B.
And G=C, so there's 22.3% G and 22.3% C.