Transcription of Reading the Code
{{id}} {{{paragraph}}}
Reading the CodeBackgroundFrancis Crick s Central Dogma states that genetic information stored in DNA flows through RNA toproteins. In other words, RNA acts as both the translator and the messenger carrying the information fromthe chromosomes to the ribosomes where proteins are assembled. Although the Central Dogma seemed toexplain the overall process, exactly how this transfer of information takes place was unclear until the problem facing scientists was to determine how four different nucleotides A (adenine), T (thymine), C(cytosine), and G (guanine) could code for 20 different amino acids. The next question that had to beanswered in deciphering the DNA code and how it works was: Are two, three, or four DNA nucleotidesrequired to specify the placement of a particular amino acid in a protein?
Reading the Code Background Francis Crick’s Central Dogma states that genetic information stored in DNA flows through RNA to proteins. In other words, RNA acts as both the translator and the messenger carrying the information from
Domain:
Source:
Link to this page:
Please notify us if you found a problem with this document:
{{id}} {{{paragraph}}}
CAN Bus Deciphering Jason Hughes, CAN Bus Deciphering Jason Hughes, RightFax - Deciphering the Resulting Status Codes, Deciphering the Energy Storage Value Proposition, Deciphering India’s Demographic Puzzle, Report Post-op Pain Blocks, Medical Abbreviations and Acronyms, GOOD SECURITY IS A GROUP EFFORT