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A codon contains three amino acids. Each codon in mRNA corresponds to a specific amino acid in a protein sequence.
Codons are three bases on mRNA which go to the ribosome which translates into amino acids. The amino acids are attached to tRNA which has the anticodon on it which will bind to the codon on the mRNA. This is how the ribosome picks out the correct amino acid. the tRNA with the anti codon just binds to the codon and the amino acids start binding together via peptide bonds.
yes, but there are amino acids can be represented by many codons.
There can only be one amino acid for every codon. Tryptophan and Methionine are the types of amino acids that correspond to codon.
One codon specifies a specific amino acid. However, more than one codon can code for the same amino acid. For example, the codon GUU codes for the specific amino acid valine; and the codons GUC, GUA, and GUG also code for valine.
Transcription
a codon is the sequence of three nucleotides of mRNA, the anti codon is the amino acid of tRNA that is matched to the codon.
A codon is a sequence of three nucleotides in DNA or RNA that codes for a specific amino acid. A sense codon is a codon that specifies one of the 20 standard amino acids in protein synthesis.
Methionine, made from the codon AUG.
No. Amino acids are not always represented by only one codon. Several may code for one amino acid.
Each codon codes for only one amino acid, or a codon is a start or stop codon, but no codon codes for more than one amino acid.
No. Some are specified by only one codon eg. methionine and tryptophan. But some have more than one codon eg. threonine.