0:00
All right.
00:01
So in order to answer this question, we need to just remember a couple things.
00:04
We need to remember that the four nucleotides for dna are a, t, g, and c, or adenine, thymine, glanine, and cytosine.
00:15
So there's four nucleotides.
00:21
I can't talk.
00:22
All right? we know from looking at things called like a codon chart when we're taking dna and we're creating rna.
00:31
That there can be some repeats when using segments of rna to try to figure out what the amino acid is.
00:39
But if we want to just do the math, so say we took dna, and from it, we created rna.
00:48
So the transcript would be uacg here.
00:55
Those are our four different nucleotides.
00:59
If a codon, which is just three letters, three bases, every three bases of, rna represent an amino acid that is added to a structure that's going to eventually be a protein.
01:18
Four nucleotides for each base would give us a four times four times four of the different amount of combinations that we could make or different amino acids that we could create there...