The relationship between the melting temperature ($\text{Tm}$) of a long double-stranded $\text{DNA}$ molecule and its $\text{G-C}$ content is given by the empirical formula (often assumed at a standard ionic strength):
$$\text{Tm} = 69.3 + 0.41 \times (\% \text{GC})$$
Where:
$\text{Tm}$ is the melting temperature in degrees Celsius ($^\circ \text{C}$).
$\% \text{GC}$ is the percentage of Guanine-Cytosine base pairs (by count).
We are given $\text{Tm} = 85^\circ \text{C}$. The total length ($5000 \text{ bp}$) is large enough that the length correction term is negligible.
$\text{1. Calculate \%GC}$
Substitute the given $\text{Tm}$ into the formula:
$$85 = 69.3 + 0.41 \times (\% \text{GC})$$
$$85 - 69.3 = 0.41 \times (\% \text{GC})$$
$$15.7 = 0.41 \times (\% \text{GC})$$
$$\% \text{GC} = \frac{15.7}{0.41} \approx 38.2927\%$$
$\text{2. Calculate \%AT}$
Since the only base pairs are $\text{A-T}$ and $\text{G-C}$:
$$\% \text{AT} = 100\% - \% \text{GC}$$
$$\% \text{AT} = 100 - 38.2927$$
$$\% \text{AT} \approx 61.7073\%$$
$\text{3. Rounding}$
Rounding the result to one decimal place:
$$\% \text{AT} = 61.7\%$$
$$\text{The } \% \text{ AT base pairs in this sample is } \mathbf{61.7}$$
| Group I | Group II |
| P) NaCl | 1) Coordination bond |
| Q) $H_2$ | 2) Polar covalent bond |
| R) $Pd-P$ bond in $Pd(PPh_3)_4 | 3) Covalent bond |
| S) $C-Cl$ bond in $CH_3Cl $ | 4) Ionic bond |

