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  2. Saturation mutagenesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saturation_mutagenesis

    Additionally, it is usual to use degenerate codons that minimise stop codons (which are generally not desired). Consequently, the fully randomised 'NNN' is not ideal, and alternative, more restricted degenerate codons are used. 'NNK' and 'NNS' have the benefit of encoding all 20 amino acids, but still encode a stop codon 3% of the time.

  3. Codon degeneracy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Codon_degeneracy

    A nucleotide substitution at a 4-fold degenerate site is always a synonymous mutation with no change on the amino acid. [2]: 521–522 A less degenerate site would produce a nonsynonymous mutation on some of the substitutions. An example (and the only) 3-fold degenerate site is the third position of an isoleucine codon.

  4. DNA and RNA codon tables - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNA_and_RNA_codon_tables

    A codon table can be used to translate a genetic code into a sequence of amino acids. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The standard genetic code is traditionally represented as an RNA codon table, because when proteins are made in a cell by ribosomes , it is messenger RNA (mRNA) that directs protein synthesis .

  5. Codon usage bias - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Codon_usage_bias

    Codon usage bias in Physcomitrella patens. Codon usage bias refers to differences in the frequency of occurrence of synonymous codons in coding DNA.A codon is a series of three nucleotides (a triplet) that encodes a specific amino acid residue in a polypeptide chain or for the termination of translation (stop codons).

  6. Forbidden graph characterization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forbidden_graph...

    Graph minor Wagner's theorem: Outerplanar graphs: K 4 and K 2,3: Graph minor Diestel (2000), [1] p. 107: Outer 1-planar graphs: Six forbidden minors Graph minor Auer et al. (2013) [2] Graphs of fixed genus: A finite obstruction set Graph minor Diestel (2000), [1] p. 275: Apex graphs: A finite obstruction set Graph minor [3] Linklessly ...

  7. Bacterial, archaeal and plant plastid code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bacterial,_archaeal_and...

    A Possible start codons in NCBI table 1. AUG is most common. [2] The two other start codons listed by table 1 (GUG and UUG) are rare in eukaryotes. [3] Prokaryotes have less strigent start codon requirements; they are described by NCBI table 11.

  8. Genetic code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genetic_code

    For each codon (square brackets), the amino acid is given by the vertebrate mitochondrial code, either in the +1 frame for MT-ATP8 (in red) or in the +3 frame for MT-ATP6 (in blue). The MT-ATP8 genes terminates with the TAG stop codon (red dot) in the +1 frame. The MT-ATP6 gene starts with the ATG codon (blue circle for the M amino acid) in the ...

  9. Template:Inverse codon table - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Inverse_codon_table

    This is the standard genetic code (NCBI table 1), in amino acid→codon form. By default it is the DNA code; for the RNA code (using Uracil rather than Thymine), add template parameter "T=U". Also listed are the compressed codon forme, using IUPAC nucleic acid notation. It's referenced in a couple of places, so have a single master copy.