The code is highly degenerate in that more than one codon can specify
the same amino acid. Because of code degeneracy, many changes
(mutations) can occur in a gene that will have no effect on the amino acid
composition of the gene product. Such changes are referred to as silent
mutations. The complementary base pairing between an mRNA codon
and its anticodon in a tRNA is usually much less restrained at the third
position than in the other two positions of the triplet. This phenomenon, called wobble, allows the same tRNAto recognize more than one mRNA
codon in many cases.
 |
| Table 5.1 Codons (displayed as mRNA triplets) |
The codon 5'-AUG-3' near the end of an mRNAmolecule is the usual
start (initiation) codon that places methionine at the beginning (amino
end) of all nascent eukaryotic polypeptide chains. Sixty-one codons are
sense codons that specify amino acids. There are three codons that are
not recognized by any tRNA: UAA, UAG, and UGA. These are termed
nonsense codons or stop codons, because they provide part of the signal
that protein synthesis should stop at that point. The completed
polypeptide can be released from its cognate tRNA and from the ribosome.
Notes
The genetic code is universal! Essentially, the
same codons encode the same amino acids in all
organisms!