the order of the bases along a gene determine the order in which
the order of the bases along a gene determine the order in which
Guanine and Cytosine, and Thymine and Adenine.
The base pairs are ordered such that they spell out the order in which amino acids will be placed to build a protein. When they are in the wrong order, either the wrong amino acid is made, or sometime it will create a shortened protein which may or may not perform its intended function.
The order of the nitrogen bases along a gene forms a genetic code that specifies what type of protein will be produced
The sequence of nitrogenous bases (A, T, G and C) forms a code for the sequence of amino acids in a protein. The code is a triplet code. This means that three bases code for one amino acid. So, the order of the bases in a gene determines the order of the amino acids in a protein.
The order determines the amino acid sequence in proteins. Think of nucleotide as a building block of DNA. Nucleotides are made of a sugar, a phosphate group and one of four bases (adenine, Guanine, Thymine and Cytosine).
amino acid sequence
It determines the sequence of amino acids in a protein.
an allele
genetic engineer
The gene that determines a man's hair is on the x chromosome.
allele