Genetic Code Journals

 Genetic code is the term we use in order to combine the four bases of DNA — the A, C, G, and Ts — to enable the cellular machinery, the ribosome, to read them and transform them into a protein. Every three nucleotides in a row counts as a triplet and register for a single amino acid, in the genetic code. So, every three-code sequence for an amino acid. And proteins consist of hundreds of amino acids, at times. And the code which would create one protein could contain hundreds, maybe even thousands, of triplets. This is the rule by which during the translation process the information encoded in genetic material such as DNA and mRNA is translated into the proteins in living cells. Journal impact factor provides a quantitative evaluation tool for the grading, evaluation, sorting, and comparison of similar journals. It reflects the average number of citations to recent articles published in science and social science journals in a given year or period, and is often used as a proxy for a journal's relative importance within its field. It is first conceived by the Institute for Science Intelligence director, Eugene Garfield.