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4.10: Genetic Code

  • Page ID
    1488
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    How do you go from four letters to 20 amino acids?

    You need a code. And the code that changes the information embedded in DNA and RNA into ordered amino acids and proteins is the genetic code. And every living organism uses the same genetic code.

    The Genetic Code

    How is the information in a gene encoded? The answer is the genetic code. The genetic code consists of the sequence of nitrogen bases—A, C, G, U—in an mRNA chain. The four bases make up the “letters” of the genetic code. The letters are combined in groups of three to form code “words,” called codons. Each codon stands for (encodes) one amino acid, unless it codes for a start or stop signal.

    There are 20 common amino acids in proteins. There are 64 possible codons, more than enough to code for the 20 amino acids. The genetic code is shown in the Figure below.

    f-d_c43f2a70c5d7d8cac79a06e63e182477fb8b2e13b2e2eb713f6839a7+IMAGE_THUMB_POSTCARD_TINY+IMAGE_THUMB_POSTCARD_TINY.jpgThe Genetic Code. To find the amino acid for a particular codon, find the cell in the table for the first and second bases of the codon. Then, within that cell, find the codon with the correct third base. For example CUG codes for leucine, AAG codes for lysine, and GGG codes for glycine.

    Reading the Genetic Code

    As shown in the Figure above, the codon AUG codes for the amino acid methionine. This codon is also the start codon that begins translation. The start codon establishes the reading frame of mRNA. The reading frame is the way the letters are divided into codons. After the AUG start codon, the next three letters are read as the second codon. The next three letters after that are read as the third codon, and so on. This is illustrated in the Figure below. The mRNA molecule is read, codon by codon, until a stop codon is reached. UAG, UGA, and UAA are all stop codons. They do not code for any amino acids. Stop codons are also known as termination codons.

    f-d_3aef4b10f0a1ef07b2356c12bd13569fe05ad2b278ec23c67ef3fdb1+IMAGE_THUMB_POSTCARD_TINY+IMAGE_THUMB_POSTCARD_TINY.pngReading the Genetic Code. The genetic code is read three bases at a time. Codons are the code words of the genetic code. Which amino acid does codon 2 in the drawing stand for?

    Characteristics of the Genetic Code

    The genetic code has a number of important characteristics.

    • The genetic code is universal. All known living organisms use the same genetic code. This shows that all organisms share a common evolutionary history.
    • The genetic code is unambiguous. Each codon codes for just one amino acid (or start or stop). What might happen if codons encoded more than one amino acid?
    • The genetic code is redundant. Most amino acids are encoded by more than one codon. In the Figure above, how many codons code for the amino acid threonine? What might be an advantage of having more than one codon for the same amino acid?

    Summary

    • The genetic code consists of the sequence of bases in DNA or RNA.
    • Groups of three bases form codons, and each codon stands for one amino acid (or start or stop).
    • The codons are read in sequence following the start codon until a stop codon is reached.
    • The genetic code is universal, unambiguous, and redundant.

    Review

    1. What is the genetic code?
    2. What are codons? How many codons are there?
    3. Use the genetic code to translate the following segment of RNA into a sequence of five amino acids: GUC-GCG-CAU-AGC-AAG
    4. The genetic code is universal, unambiguous, and redundant. Explain what this means.
    Image Reference Attributions
    f-d_c04c34c834a7b9eb7a586a0a56b6734951528e0d6258f075f958211a+IMAGE_TINY+IMAGE_TINY.jpg [Figure 1] Credit: Zachary Wilson
    Source: CK-12 Foundation
    License: CC BY-NC
    f-d_c43f2a70c5d7d8cac79a06e63e182477fb8b2e13b2e2eb713f6839a7+IMAGE_THUMB_SMALL_TINY+IMAGE_THUMB_SMALL_TINY.jpg [Figure 2] Credit: Hana Zavadska;Kyle Schneider
    Source: CK-12 Foundation ; commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:TRNA_all2.png
    License: CC BY-NC 3.0; Public Domain
    f-d_3aef4b10f0a1ef07b2356c12bd13569fe05ad2b278ec23c67ef3fdb1+IMAGE_THUMB_SMALL_TINY+IMAGE_THUMB_SMALL_TINY.png [Figure 3] Credit: Zachary Wilson
    Source: CK-12 Foundation
    License: CC BY-NC 3.0

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