61 codons specify the amino acids used in proteins and 3 codons (stop codons) signal termination of growth of the polypeptide chain...so 64 total
61 codons specify the amino acids used in proteins and 3 codons (stop codons) signal termination of growth of the polypeptide chain...so 64 total
there are 100,OOO,0000 codons.
there are 64 condons
There are 61 protein-coding codons.
There are 2 stop codons and 2 start codons
42 = 16 possible codons.
Every codon is three nucleotide pairs, so you would have 25 codons.
Codons are read in triplets (3) so divide 144 by 3
150 bases are needed for 50 codons .
There are 2 stop codons and 2 start codons
There are four codons in AAA UGC UCG UAA. A codon is a sequence made of three nitrogenous bases. Codons have particular features, making it possible for them to be start codons, stop codons, introns, or exons.
42 = 16 possible codons.
Three.
Every codon is three nucleotide pairs, so you would have 25 codons.
mRNA
Codons are read in triplets (3) so divide 144 by 3
150 bases are needed for 50 codons .
Yes, DNA has codons. Codons are three nucleotides of DNA which code for a single amino acid.
The answer to this question is 64 CODONS. Codons are the "words" consisting of the "letter" bases, which are a, u, g, and c. EXAMPLE: AUG (Methionine) and CAG (Glutamine) AUG and CAG are just two of the 64 possible codons.
anti-codons for sure!
One codon.