Wobble hypothesis

The Wobble Hypothesis was proposed by Francis Crick (1966) to explain how a limited number of tRNA molecules can recognize multiple codons for the same amino acid.

Key Idea:

• In translation, the first two bases of the codon (mRNA) strictly follow base-pairing rules with the anticodon (tRNA).

• The third base of the codon (called the wobble position) can form non-standard, flexible base pairing with the anticodon.

• This “wobble” allows one tRNA to read more than one codon.

Example of Wobble Pairing:

• Standard Watson–Crick pairs: 
A–U
G–C

• Wobble base pairing: see below table

Anticodon base

(tRNA, 5’→3’)

Possible Codon base at

3rd position (mRNA, 3’→5’)

C

G

A

U

U

A or G

G

U or C

I (Inosine)

U, C, or A

Significance: 

• Explains why there are 64 codons but fewer tRNAs (~30–40 in humans).

• Explains degeneracy of codon – multiple codons code for the same amino acid.

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