Answer :

Answer:

See answer below

Explanation:

Hi there,

c. Ala (Alanine)

To get started, use the codon chart. Notice, the mRNA strand has a specific order in which bases are added. In this case, Guanine-Ctyosine-Uracil corresponds with G-C-U.

To read the codon chart, start off in the first position, which is G (blue row in picture). Next, to locate a specific box, look at the second position, which is C (orange column), and the specific box is located. At this point, a phenomena known as "wobbling" can happen. Wobbling is when there is redundancy in codon sequences where the same amino acid can still be produced, regardless of the third base.

The last nucleotide is U, which locates G-C-U, or Alanine.

thanks,

A strand of mRNA has the bases guanine-cytosine-uracil Aspartate or aspartic acid is an amino acid that corresponds to these bases.

how?

  • The amino acid that corresponds to each mRNA codon can be found in a table.
  • Steps to determining the correct amino acid:
  • Search the rows on the left side of the table for the first letter in the codon (here: G).
  • Find the second letter (A in this case) in the columns. This limits the search to one cell in the table.
  • To find the codon, look for the third letter (here: U) on the right side of the table (here: GAU). The amino acid abbreviation appears next to this codon (here: Asp).
  • In this case, your mRNA codon is GAU (guanine-adenine-uracil), which corresponds to the Asp amino acid. This is aspartic acid.

to learn more about amino acids : https://brainly.com/question/23211292

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