i think nine bases are needed for three amino acids because i think it takes three bases to make one amino acid
Nine nucleotides are needed to specify three amino acids.
You will need one start codon, one for each amino acid (3) and a stop codon. That adds up to 5 codons.
A codon (3-base code) codes for one amino acid.
3
this dick
That strand should have 3 amino acids, because one amino acid is composed of three nucleotide bases.
Three.
each codon have 3 nitrogenous bases . 3 nitrogenous bases = 1 amino acid or say 1 codon =1 amino acid ,so 2 codon = 2 amino acid
3, a three-nucleotide codon in a nucleic acid sequence specifies a single amino acid.The code defines how sequences of three nucleotides, called codons, specify which amino acid will be added next during protein synthesis
Condon has 3 bases sequences which three consecutive nucleotide specify a single amino acid that is to be added to the polypptide.
Condon has 3 bases sequences which three consecutive nucleotide specify a single amino acid that is to be added to the polypptide.
I'm not fully sure of your question, but if you are asking how many nucleotide bases are needed, then the answer is 3. Three nucleotide bases of DNA will translate to mRNA and these will code for tRNA anticodons, which carry one amino acid with them.
The genetic code refers to the nucleotide triplets of DNA and RNA molecules that carry genetic information. It specifies the correlation between an RNA-nucleotide sequence, as well as an amino-acid sequence.
nine. one amino acid is composed of three bases.
the sequence of bases
amino acid sequence
no
this dick
Nucleutoides.
i think nine bases are needed for three amino acids because i think it takes three bases to make one amino acid
Three.