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  1. The genetic code & codon table (article) | Khan Academy

    Decoding messages is also a key step in gene expression, in which information from a gene is read out to build a protein. In this article, we'll take a closer look at the genetic code, which …

  2. Khan Academy

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  3. Intro to gene expression (central dogma) - Khan Academy

    During translation, the nucleotides of the mRNA are read in groups of three called codons. Each codon specifies a particular amino acid or a stop signal. This set of relationships is known as …

  4. Overview of translation (article) | Khan Academy

    All together, this collection of codon-amino acid relationships is called the genetic code, because it lets cells “decode” an mRNA into a chain of amino acids.

  5. The genetic code (article) | 3rd quarter | Khan Academy

    The genetic code The genetic code Translation The Genetic Code Science SHS Biology 2 3rd quarter

  6. The genetic code (article) | Translation | Khan Academy

    How are the instructions for building a protein encoded in DNA, and how are they deciphered by the cell? In this article, we'll take a closer look at the genetic code, which allows DNA and RNA …

  7. Gene expression and regulation | AP®︎/College Biology | Khan …

    Understand how the genetic code directs translation from mRNA to protein. Explore the central dogma of gene expression and the role of ribosomes in building polypeptides.

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  9. Stages of translation (article) | Khan Academy

    These relationships between mRNA codons and amino acids are known as the genetic code (which you can explore further in the genetic code article).

  10. RNA and protein synthesis review (article) | Khan Academy

    The genetic code is read in three-base words called codons. Each codon corresponds to a single amino acid (or signals the starting and stopping points of a sequence).