i think its an anticodon for tRNA
a set of three nucleotides is called codons. A set of 3 nucleotides in a tRNA that attaches to the complimentary codon is called the anti-codon
The three main groups in science are chemistry,biology and physics.
The three-base sequence on a tRNA molecule is known as an anti-codon. This matches up with the codon (another 3-base code) on the mRNA to ensure that the correct amino acid is added to the chain (protein) being created.
THEY ARE ALL NITROGENOUS BASES IN THE DNA adenine and guanine are purines thymine and cytosine are pyrimidines
The bases in a DNA double helical chain are paired A-T and C-G. The A and T bases are bound by 3 hydrogen bonds per pair, and the C and G bases are bound by three hydrogen bonds per pair.
adjacent, opposite and hypotenuse
No, the analogy doesn't directly prove that three bases code for an amino acid. However, it helps understand the concept that the genetic code is written in groups of three nucleotide bases called codons that code for specific amino acids.
no, 3 nitrogen bases combined are called codons you moron
Three. One with them all right next to each other. One with the chloro groups on alternating carbons. One with two chloro groups on adjacent carbons, and one on a non-adjacent carbon.
Every three bases is called a condon. These tell you the specific amino acids!
A sequence of three adjacent bases in DNA, called a codon, codes for a single amino acid. There are 64 possible codons, each specifying one of the 20 amino acids or serving as a signal to start or stop protein synthesis.
sister groups
the area between the bases and home plate is called the base path.
the area between the bases and home plate is called the base path.
Periodic table has 18 groups; see the link below.
Scalene, Isosceles and Equilateral.
I'm not completely sure but I think it's uracine, glycine, cytosine, and adenine. But that's 4