In
molecular genetics, an
open reading frame (ORF) is the part of a
reading frame that has the potential to code for a protein or peptide. An ORF is a continuous stretch of
codons that do not contain a
stop codon (usually UAA, UAG or UGA). An AUG codon within the ORF (not necessarily the first) may indicate where translation starts. The
transcription termination site is located after the ORF, beyond the
translation stop codon, because if transcription were to cease before the stop codon, an incomplete protein would be made during translation. In eukaryotic genes with multiple exons, ORFs may span exons. These would be spliced into an ORF in the mRNA.