Examples of using Codons in English and their translations into Hebrew
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
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Programming
Five codons: none.
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae synonymous codon usage has been shown to influence mRNA folding stability, with mRNA encoding different protein secondary structure preferring different codons.
Six codons: Arg, Leu, Ser.
So if you have 50 amino acids that make up insulin,that means you're going to have to have 50 codons, which means you have to have 150 bases or 150 of these.
Three codons: Ile, stop("nonsense").
In the standard genetic code,there are three mRNA stop codons: UAG("amber"), UAA("ochre"), and UGA("opal" or"umber").
For the Codons animation, the left-most two base pairs are hidden, leaving exactly five 3-base codons(15 base pairs).
Explanation of codons and anticodons.
Because there are 64 possible codons, but only 20 amino acids(as well as a stop signal, indicating that translation should stop), some amino acids are coded for by 2, 3, 4, or 6 different codons.
The double helix has an alphabet of 64 codons, that are used to encode our human DNA.
In this system, of the 64 possible permutations of three-letter codons that can be made from the four nucleotides, 61 code for one of the 20 amino acids, and the remaining three code for stop signals.
The double helix has an alphabet of 64 codons, that are used to encode our human DNA.
This is possible because the genetic code is"degenerate", meaning that some amino acids are coded for by more than one three-base-pair codon; since some of the codons for a given amino acid differ by just one base pair from others coding for the same amino acid, a mutation that replaces the"normal" base by one of the alternatives will result in incorporation of the same amino acid into the growing polypeptide chain when the gene is translated.
If you have 1,500 amino acids,that means you're going to have to have 1,500 codons, which means you're going to have roughly 4,500 of these base pairs that code for it.
Moreover, the gene encoding EcoRI endonuclease uses particular codons to specify given amino acids that are strikingly different from the codons used by most E.
Synonymous changes may not be neutral because certain codons are translated more efficiently(faster and/or more accurately) than others.
So the code that Mike Montague andthe team developed actually puts frequent stop codons, so it's a different alphabet but allows us to use the entire English alphabet with punctuation and numbers.
Codon 2153 is CAA, which is a codon for the amino acid glutamine(Gin).
How many distinct codon sequences are there in an RNA messenger molecule?
Each triple is called a codon.
So three base pairs make a codon.
(2) first member of a codon.
Each triplet is called a codon.
One codon: Met, Trp.
Each triple is called a codon.
Pyrrolysine uses a different stop codon, UAG.
Each is called a codon.
Detection of Kit mutation at codon 816 in bone marrow, blood or other extracutaneous organ.
Each of these amino acids is coded for by asequence of three DNA base pairs called a codon.
Because you have to have three base pairs that code for one amino acid, and actually, three base pairs,this is called a codon.