DNA contains a sequence of bases. During Protein synthesis, the DNA splits in half and RNA molecules effectively copy the DNA strand. RNA strand then moves from the cells nucleus to the ribosomes often found on rough endoplasmic reticulum. The ribosome sort of decodes the RNA base sequence and tRNA molecules carry in the correct amino acid sequence. The anti codon on the RNA matches the codon on the amino acid. The amino acids are put in the correct order and then form peptide bonds. this creates a Protein.
in summary, the codon on the rna molecule codes for the production of a protein.
The codes that are in the mRNA need to be translated in the ribosome to make a functional protein.
It is a triplet of bases on the RNA molecule.
a codon is a sequence of three nucleotides that codes for one amino acid. i got it out of the back of my biology book
The mRNA has the codon region to match with the tRNA's anticodon region.
messenger (mRNA)
transfer(tRNA) has anti-codons
messenger RNA
(mRNA)
tRNA (or transfer RNA) molecules contain an anti-codon loop that contains within it a triplet complementary nucleotide sequence to that of the codon. This triplet is called the anti-codon
A codon is found on the mesenger RNA (mRNA) the anti codon is the exact opposite of a codon. so lets say your codon was G C A your anticodon would be C G U The codon and anti codon work together to help make strands of protein The codon is kind of like the code for what protein you need. transfer RNA (tRNA) collects free RNA nucleotides and brings them to the Ribosome to create an anti codon which brings a certain protein to the ribosome. Do with that information what you will.
A codon is made of RNA that is formed from organic molecules that mimic a segment of DNA in order to synthesize a protein. The codon is a set of nucleotide units used to code for different amino acids. The nucleotides in DNA are adenine, guanine, cytosine, and thymine, usually represented by A, G, T, and C. When translated into RNA, that forms codons, thymine is replaced with uracil in a RNA chain. In sets of RNA are sets of many codons. A codon is a set of three nucleotides in RNA that are translated into amino acids to by a ribosome. These sets of amino acids are the building blocks to forming different proteins.
I assume the word you're looking for is "codon".
A codon is a set of three nucleotides that specifies which amino acid will be added to the growing protein during translationl. Since a codon is found in DNA and RNA, the NUCLEOTIDE BASESare the molecules that make up codons
a three base sequence and its found on the Transfer RNA
tRNA (or transfer RNA) molecules contain an anti-codon loop that contains within it a triplet complementary nucleotide sequence to that of the codon. This triplet is called the anti-codon
The complement of the codon is the anticodon.
Codon is found on the messenger RNA(m RNA).During translation, the codons on the m RNA are read by the ribosome and amino acid corresponding to the codon is added. when ribosome encounters a stop codon (UAG,UGA and UAA) translation terminates.
We can't answer as we do not know what book you are referring to.
The tRNA has the anticodon and mRNA has the codon.
Transcription
yes it does.
tRNA
condon
codon on mRNA and the amino-acid specified by the codon
A codon is found on the mesenger RNA (mRNA) the anti codon is the exact opposite of a codon. so lets say your codon was G C A your anticodon would be C G U The codon and anti codon work together to help make strands of protein The codon is kind of like the code for what protein you need. transfer RNA (tRNA) collects free RNA nucleotides and brings them to the Ribosome to create an anti codon which brings a certain protein to the ribosome. Do with that information what you will.