Yo mama makes up a codon, JK.... The correct answer is that 3 nittrogen bases make up a codon.
It is a triplet of bases (codon) coding for the amino acid tyrosine
In protein synthesis, three DNA bases, known as a codon, are read at a time by the ribosome. Each codon corresponds to a specific amino acid in the process of translating the genetic information into a protein.
A codon in DNA or mRNA is a group of three nitrogenous bases that encode for one specific amino acid. The sequence of codons in the mRNA is read during translation to determine the amino acid sequence of a protein.
Every three bases is called a condon. These tell you the specific amino acids!
Among many things an RNA primer for DNA replication.
Codon
It is a triplet of bases (codon) coding for the amino acid tyrosine
codon
In protein synthesis, three DNA bases, known as a codon, are read at a time by the ribosome. Each codon corresponds to a specific amino acid in the process of translating the genetic information into a protein.
Name for a sequence of DNA bases that code for one protein?
7 bases
A codon in DNA or mRNA is a group of three nitrogenous bases that encode for one specific amino acid. The sequence of codons in the mRNA is read during translation to determine the amino acid sequence of a protein.
Every three bases is called a condon. These tell you the specific amino acids!
I don't understand your question. mRNA does not have triplets. Did you mean codon? Triplet refers to DNA, codon to mRNA.
3
Among many things an RNA primer for DNA replication.
DNA is composed of nucleotides, which each contain a nitrogenous base. The order of these bases is what determines the end product (protein) created by the DNA. Three of these bases make up what is known as a codon. This corresponds to a particular amino acid, which is added to the protein being created when this codon is read. So the bases of DNA code for certain amino acids.