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Adenine, thymine, cytosine and guanine.
It is a triplet of bases on the RNA molecule.
anticodon
anticodon
anticodon
Codons code for a particular amino acid with a triplet of DNA nucleotides.There are 20 amino acids, and 4 nucleic acids. Using a single base you could only code for 4/20, with two bases 16/20, 3 bases 64/20. Therefore 3 bases are necessary to encode all of the possible amino-acids.
An anticodon is matched with three bases. This is also called a triplet nucleotide or a trinucleotides.
No, a codon is a triplet of mRNA bases that specifies a particular amino acid.
There are 64 different triplet combinations of base pairs, which code for 22 different amino acids.
I don't understand your question. mRNA does not have triplets. Did you mean codon? Triplet refers to DNA, codon to mRNA.
It is a triplet of bases (codon) coding for the amino acid tyrosine
Four 'types' of nucleotide bases - when they are read three-at-a-time - this is considered to be a triplet-codon. Triplet codons are individually related to one specific amino acid, a polypeptide being a short protein.