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A simple protein has 88 amino acids in its primary structure. How many bases are required in the mRNA to produce this sequence? Explain your answer [NOV98/IV/3]
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My earlier answer is incorrect, It should be 267.
The start codon codes for an amino acid which is methionine. When the polypeptide chain reaches it stop codon, It simply stops and does not code for an amino acid. The question asks for the amount of bases needed to produce the sequence, So the answer should be 88 x 3 = 264 (to clarify that there must be 264 anti-codons) and add it by 3 (to clarify that there must be a stop codon in the mRNA), so the final answer is 267.
It shouldn't be 270 since start codon codes for an amino acid.
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