Anti-codons.
anti-codons for sure!
transfer ribo nuclic acid
Once the original DNA has been unzipped and the mrna has made a complementary copy it is time for the trna to do its work. The mrna moves out of the nucleus and moves into the rrna where the trna come with certain group of 3 nucleotides which codes for a specific amino acid. When the bases on the trna and the ones on the mrna are matched it drops of its amino acid to the trna behind it which forms a peptide bond with the other amino acids.(The rrna has 3 slots where the trna sit and deposit their amino acid to the one behind in line to them.) After the mrna has fully been decoded into amino acids their chain breaks off to make a protein in the secondary, tertiary, or quaternary structure.
tRNA is a short section of RNA and it carries one specific amino acid. It has 3 bases (ex. CAU) which encode this one amino acid. If the mRNA encodes this one amino acid the tRNA brings it to the Ribosome where the mRNA is being read. The Ribosome puts the Amino acids brought by the tRNA together to form a protein. In other words the tRNA bring the material the MRNA asks for and the Ribosome puts it together.
It links the correct amino acids together
tRNA molecules attach to codons.-apex
The anticodons on tRNA corresponding to the mRNA codons would be UCU-CCA-GCU. This is because they are complimentary to the mRNA codons based on the genetic code.
putos - what in the hell is putos? it sounds NASTY
Condons
Condons
Does wood creek condons in broken take oklahoma houseing?
its codons and anticodons and they determine the alanine, cytosine, guanine, thymine, and urcail in amino acids. without them we wouldn't have DNA and no one would be here. they match up DNA strands to determine your genotype and phenotype. i know it sounds like a bunch of jibber jabber but that's what it is haha.
Uaa, uag, uga
Anticodons are found on transfer RNA.
they can't steel condons anymore
Charged tRNA has an amino acid attached to it, ready for protein synthesis, while uncharged tRNA does not have an amino acid attached. Charged tRNA binds to the appropriate codon on the mRNA during translation, while uncharged tRNA cannot participate in translation.
Yes, tRNA is single-stranded.