Because for the purpose of translation into aminoacids, each codon is three nucleotides long. In other words peptides which are the building blocks of proteins get made by translating three nucleotides at a time.
A DNA triplet code consists of three nucleotide bases, and there are four different nitrogenous bases in DNA: adenine (A), thymine (T), cytosine (C), and guanine (G). Since each position in the triplet can be occupied by any of the four bases, the total number of combinations is 4 x 4 x 4, which equals 64 possible combinations of DNA triplet codes.
GAA and GAG code for Glutamic Acid.
There are 64 different DNA triplets possible, representing all the combinations of the four nucleotide bases (A, T, C, G) taken three at a time. Each triplet codes for a specific amino acid in the genetic code.
Triplet code refers to the sequence of three nucleotides (codons) in DNA or RNA that specify a particular amino acid during protein synthesis. Each triplet in the sequence corresponds to a specific amino acid, allowing the translation of genetic information into proteins.
The DNA triplet "GAG" encodes for Glutamic Acid.
I don't understand your question. mRNA does not have triplets. Did you mean codon? Triplet refers to DNA, codon to mRNA.
The genetic code is carried in the DNA on the chromosomes.
A DNA triplet, also known as a codon, is a sequence of three nucleotides in DNA that encodes for a specific amino acid during protein synthesis. Each triplet corresponds to a specific amino acid, allowing the genetic code to be translated into proteins. There are 64 possible DNA triplets, with 61 coding for amino acids and 3 serving as stop codons to signal the end of protein synthesis.
DNA
A triplet for an amino acid, often referred to as a codon, is a sequence of three nucleotide bases in DNA or RNA that encodes a specific amino acid during protein synthesis. Each triplet corresponds to one of the 20 standard amino acids, as defined by the genetic code. For example, the triplet "AUG" codes for the amino acid methionine and also serves as the start codon for translation. These triplets are crucial for translating genetic information into functional proteins.
The genetic code for protein synthesis is found within the DNA molecule. Specifically, it is coded within the sequence of nucleotide bases along the DNA molecule, using a triplet code known as codons.
There is no triplet cheat code. The twins cheat code is "forcetwins".