Anticodon
There are four nucleotides in tRNA that are complementary to the four nucleotides on mRNA. Both types of RNA contain the nucleotides adenine, guanine, cytosine, and uracil. In both types of RNA adenine is complementary to uracil, and cytosine is complementary to guanine.
A three-nucleotide sequence makes up a codon.
anti-codon.
The codon and the anticodon interact with each other via hydrogen bonding, hence both the codon and anticodon are made up of the same number of nucleotides, which is three.
it depends on the codon spcified. The tRNA will have the complementary strand along with an amino acid, for which is specified by the mRNA. if the mRNA codon was "CGA" the tRNA codon would have an amino acid and the complementary codon of "GCU"
This arrangement is called a codon.In DNA and RNA a group of three nucleotides in a row is called a codon. In tRNA a group of three nucleotides is called an anticodon.
in cells of living beings DNA i.e. deoxyribonucleotide is found which is formed of nucleic acid monomers and this DNA is found in double helical thread in which codon or the nucleotide of one strand is bonded with hydrogen bond of codon of other thread the other codons are called anti-codon of each otherlikeA-TG-CT-AC-G
codon
Codon
No, a codon is made up of three nucleotides. Each codon encodes for a specific amino acid in the genetic code.
Three nucleotides makes up each codon. The codons consist of combination of 4 differing nucleotides A,G,T, and C.
A codon is the triplet sequence in the messenger RNA (mRNA) transcript which specifies a corresponding amino acid (or a start or stop command). An anticodon is the corresponding triplet sequence on the transfer RNA (tRNA) which brings in the specific amino acid to the ribosome during translation. The anticodon is complementary to the codon, that is, if the codon is AUU, then the anticodon is UAA. There are no T (Thymine) nitrogen bases in mRNA. It's replaced by U (Uracil).