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A-t g-c
tRNA contains an anticodon which is a sequence of three nitrogen bases that is complimentary to a particular mRNA codon.
it uncoils and unzips the double helix at the weak hydrogen bonds between the nitrogenous bases. Free RNA nucleotides match with the complementary DNA strand and form mRNA which then moves out of the nucleus through the pore an continue the protein synthesis through translation.
because the codons will continue the same letters and will match up the same way that it did so it will repeat itself over and over again.
There are 3 bases in an anticodon that match up with the 3 bases of the codon.
A-t g-c
tRNA contains an anticodon which is a sequence of three nitrogen bases that is complimentary to a particular mRNA codon.
it uncoils and unzips the double helix at the weak hydrogen bonds between the nitrogenous bases. Free RNA nucleotides match with the complementary DNA strand and form mRNA which then moves out of the nucleus through the pore an continue the protein synthesis through translation.
because the codons will continue the same letters and will match up the same way that it did so it will repeat itself over and over again.
A = adenine U = Uracil T = Thymine G = Guanine C = cytosine In DNA it's A:T and C:G In RNA it's A:U and C:G
mRNA is the RNA that carries information during transcription and translation. It has codons, which match up with the anticodons on tRNA. tRNA is the RNA that bonds to amino acids and transfers them to ribosomes, and mRNA.
mRNA is the RNA that carries information during transcription and translation. It has codons, which match up with the anticodons on tRNA. tRNA is the RNA that bonds to amino acids and transfers them to ribosomes, and mRNA.
Match fuel is made of lead nitrate , when match gets lighten lead nitrate is being converted into lead oxide & nitrogen dioxide . whne nitrogen dioxide comes in contact with air it catches fire therfore match gets lighten.
yes
There is no compound by the name nitrogen phosphate. The best match I could think of is ammonium phosphate with the formula, (NH4)3PO4
A codon is found in the DNA sequence and in the mRNA sequence. The anticodon is the opposite sequence that would match with the sequence of the codon and allows pairing of the anticodon with the codon
There are 3 bases in an anticodon that match up with the 3 bases of the codon.