Hi, I have a question related to the amino acid tryptophan.
I know that the common 20 amino acids are coded by several kinds of codon except for methionine (which is coded by AUG) and tryptophan (which is coded by UGG).
I understand that because methionine is the one to send ribosome a signal to start a translation process, it is coded by only AUG. If more than one amino acid can decide a start point, the coding sequence can be interrupted from unwanted locations.
However, tryptophan is neither a start nor stop amino acid, and is the one building block of polypeptide. Why does tryptophan have to be coded by only one codon? If there is any one who understand the reason for this, I would greatly appreciate an explanation for it.
All the best,
Hiro