The Nature of the Genetic Code (Edexcel International A Level Biology): Revision Note
The Nature of the Genetic Code
The triplet code
The sequence of DNA nucleotide bases found within a gene is determined by a triplet (three-letter) code
Each sequence of three bases (i.e. each triplet of bases) in a gene codes for one amino acid
These triplets codes for different amino acids – there are 20 different amino acids that cells use to make up different proteins
For example:
CAG codes for the amino acid valine
TTC codes for the amino acid lysine
GAC codes for the amino acid leucine
CCG codes for the amino acid glycine
Some of these triplets of bases code for start (AUG – methionine) and stop signals
These start and stop signals tell the cell where individual genes start and stop
As a result, the cell reads the DNA correctly and produces the correct sequences of amino acids (and therefore the correct protein molecules) that it requires to function properly
The genetic code is non-overlapping
The non-overlapping nature of the genetic code means that each base is only read once
The adjacent codons do not overlap
A non-overlapping code means that the same letter is not used for two different codons; in other words, no single base can take part in the formation of more than one codon
The genetic code is degenerate
There are four bases, so there are 64 different codons (triplets) possible (43 = 64), yet there are only 20 amino acids that commonly occur in biological proteins
This is why the code is said to be degenerate: multiple codons can code for the same amino acids
The degenerate nature of the genetic code can limit the effect of mutations
The mRNA codons and their amino acids, showing the degenerate nature of the genetic code
The genetic code is universal
The genetic code is also universal, meaning that almost every organism uses the same code (there are a few rare and minor exceptions)
The same triplet codes code for the same amino acids in all living things (meaning that genetic information is transferable between species)
The universal nature of the genetic code is why genetic engineering (the transfer of genes from one species to another) is possible
Examiner Tips and Tricks
You will not be required to memorise specific codons and the amino acids for which they code.
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