baseparring
Baseparring is the act of forming specific pairs between nucleotide bases in nucleic acids, a nonstandard spelling commonly treated as a misspelling of base pairing. The concept refers to the hydrogen-bond–driven interactions that stabilize DNA and RNA structures by linking complementary bases.
In DNA, canonical base pairs are adenine with thymine (A–T) and cytosine with guanine (C–G). In RNA,
Noncanonical pairings and mismatches can occur, such as wobble base pairing (notably G–U in RNA), or alternative
In practical terms, base pairing informs many laboratory techniques and biotechnologies, including primer design for polymerase