The minimum number of nucleotides in an mRNA molecule encoding a protein of 80 amino acids is 243 nucleotides. This is because each amino acid is encoded by a codon, which consists of three nucleotides. Therefore, for 80 amino acids, you would need 80 codons, resulting in 80 x 3 = 240 nucleotides, plus at least one additional nucleotide for a stop codon, totaling 243 nucleotides.
One amino acid is encoded by 3 nucleotides. That means 150 amino acids are encoded by 150*3=450 nucleotides. But there are also Start and Stop condons, which are also encoded by 3 nucleotides each. Therefore, I guess, the theoretical minimum is 450 nucleotides and the full (maximum) should be 450+ 3+ 3= 456 nucleotides.
Yes, it is a diatomic element, a diatomic molecule. Some examples:O2 gasBr2 liquidI2 solid
The minimum number of oxygen atoms present in an ester molecule is one. This oxygen atom is typically part of the carbonyl group within the ester functional group.
No, two nucleotides would only provide 16 possible codon combinations (4^2 = 16), which is not enough to code for the 20 standard amino acids. A minimum of three nucleotides (triplet codons) is required to provide 64 possible codon combinations (4^3 = 64) to code for all 20 amino acids.
The minimum free energy of an RNA structure can be calculated using computational algorithms such as Mfold or ViennaRNA. These algorithms predict the most stable secondary structure of an RNA molecule based on thermodynamic parameters, such as base pairing and loop energies. The structure with the lowest free energy is considered the most stable and likely to occur in nature.
One amino acid is encoded by 3 nucleotides. That means 150 amino acids are encoded by 150*3=450 nucleotides. But there are also Start and Stop condons, which are also encoded by 3 nucleotides each. Therefore, I guess, the theoretical minimum is 450 nucleotides and the full (maximum) should be 450+ 3+ 3= 456 nucleotides.
The minimum number of nucleotides on mRNA to code for a protein of 100 amino acids is 300. This is because each amino acid is coded for by a sequence of three nucleotides called a codon. So, 100 amino acids x 3 nucleotides per codon = 300 nucleotides.
Within an error margin consisting of the minimum observable quantum, it's 1.4 .
Each amino acid needs 3 DNA bases 200x3 = 600
answer in www.ent.mrt.ac.lk/~ekulasek/cni/cni4-eck.ppt last slide
Yes, it is a diatomic element, a diatomic molecule. Some examples:O2 gasBr2 liquidI2 solid
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A minimum of 600 nucleotides is necessary to code for a polypeptide that is 200 amino acids long because each amino acid is coded for by a sequence of three nucleotides in mRNA. This is due to the genetic code being triplet, where every three nucleotides represent one amino acid.
C = 9600 = 2B*3 = 2B * 3 W = 1600 Hz
To break an HCl molecule into a hydrogen atom and a chlorine atom, the minimum energy required is equal to the bond dissociation energy of the H-Cl bond, which is approximately 432 kilojoules per mole.
3 are needed. As there are 20 amino acids used in proteins, each amino acid would have to be encoded by a minimum of three nucleotides. For example, a code of two consecutive nucleotides could specify a maximum of 16 (42) different amino acids, excluding stop and start signals. A code of three consecutive nucleotides has 64(43) different members and thus can easily accommodate the 20 amino acids plus a signal to stop protein synthesis.
No. The range is the maximum value less the minimum value. If all the values are different, the maximum must be different from the minimum. Consequently, the max minus min must be greater than zero.