Here are the essential concepts you must grasp in order to answer the question correctly.
Protein Synthesis
Protein synthesis is the biological process through which cells generate proteins, involving two main stages: transcription and translation. During transcription, the DNA sequence is copied into messenger RNA (mRNA), which then serves as a template for translation, where ribosomes synthesize proteins by linking amino acids in the order specified by the mRNA.
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Codons and Amino Acids
Codons are sequences of three nucleotides in mRNA that correspond to specific amino acids or stop signals during protein synthesis. The genetic code is degenerate, meaning that multiple codons can code for the same amino acid. A change in the DNA sequence can lead to a different codon in mRNA, potentially altering the amino acid sequence of the resulting protein.
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Mutation Effects
A mutation is a change in the DNA sequence that can affect protein synthesis. In this case, changing TTT to TTC alters the codon from coding for phenylalanine to coding for leucine. Depending on the role of the affected protein, such mutations can lead to changes in protein function, which may have various biological consequences.
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