Ready for some big numbers?
Our story so far: George claims to have found a new, unique sequence of DNA which codes for the sleuthing gene. It is 165 nucleotides long.
Bess has pooh-poohed her friend's claim, stating that all possible 165 nucleotide sequences have already been discovered.
In fact, about how many unique 165-nucleotide sequences are possible?
(To make this problem interactive, turn on javascript!)
- I need a hint ... : Use the combine-by-multiplying rule 165 times ... or use the shortcut involving powers.
- ...another hint ... : Get ready for some serious scientific notation.
I think I have the answer: 4^165 = 2.19 × 1099.
A Googol is "one" with a hundred zeros, right? So the answer to the problem above ("2" with 99 zeros) is a bit more than one-fifth of a googol. It is a seriously huge number. If it doesn't boggle your mind, you need to get your mind-boggler checked.
Put another way, there are a fifth of a google of distinct nucleotide sequences that would code for a 55-amino-acid peptide. That's an awful lot of sequences. And it seems pretty unlikely that they've all been discovered already!
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