Nucleotide
Chromosomes carry genes from parent to offspring. A gene is a section of DNA which carries coding for particular protein.
DNA contains the coding for proteins (which are made at the ribosomes) mRNA copies the coding from the DNA and carries it to the ribosome, where tRNA builds up the protein.
About 98% of human DNA is termed non genomic! Much research is required to elicidate what the all the other information codes for! The question is not scientific as it appears to pesonalise the situation and is not specific enough meaning it is open to misinterpretation as a result! Not a good question.
These molecules are RNA and ADN.
The coding region. In eukaryotes this is often divided into a number of discreet regions of DNA called exons.
Triplet-3 base sequence specifying a particulare amino acid on a DNA gene is called a triplet.
25%
Chromosomes carry genes from parent to offspring. A gene is a section of DNA which carries coding for particular protein.
The coding information that pertains to an entire section is located in the guidelines.
where is specific coding information about each section located
www.ahima.org/coding this website will give you some information on how to do medical coding but I recommend you take classes for that, there might be classes available online for that
The coding information that pertains to an entire section is located in the guidelines.
Coding information that pertains to an entire section is located where in the cpt manual?
You can find more information on medical billing and coding on this site : http://www.everest.edu/programs/category/medical-insurance-billing-and-coding.
coding
Medical coding is nothing but conversion of text information into numerical code
One place to find information on visual basic coding is a local library. The website msdn microsoft has extensive tutorials and guides on visual basic coding.