Biochemistry 2280A Lecture Notes - Lecture 25: Puromycin, Conformational Change, Stem-Loop

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The genetic code spells out the amino acid sequence in 3 letter words called codons. A one letter code with a, g, u, c, would provide: 4 codons. A two letter code would be 16 codons which is not sufficient for the 20 amino acids we have. But a 3 letter code would give you 4^3 = 64 codons. As there are 20 amino acids, a 3 letter code (64 codons) are sufficient. Key features of the genetic code: it is universal! This is key example of the unity of life: non-overlapping: codons are next to each other/consecutive. Overlap would place significant restrictions on what amino acid residues could follow each other (because adjacent codons would be in part determined by the codon of the preceding amino acid as they share some codons): no gaps. There are no spaces in the middle they are made from consecutive bases.

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