A ribosome is built of large and small subunits, ribosomal RNA and an area on the surface that catalyses the formation of peptide bonds in a newly-synthesised protein
Make sure you learn both stages of protein synthesis fully. Don’t forget WHERE these reactions take place – transcription occurs in the nucleus but translation occurs in the cytoplasm!
Most RNA exists as mRNA but don't forget the other types; transfer RNA (tRNA) and ribosomal RNA (rRNA).
Use the rules of base-pairing and the mRNA Codons and Amino Acids Table (above) to deduce the amino acid sequence coded for by the following DNA sense strand sequenceTTC GAG CAT TAC GCC
Step 1: Work out the antisense sequence using A-T and C-G base pairing rules
AAG CTC GTA ATG CGG
Step 2: Work out the mRNA codons, complementary to the antisense strand
UUC GAG CAU UAC GCC
Step 3: Use the mRNA Codons and Amino Acids Table (above) to work out the first amino acid
First base in codon = U, second base = U, third base = C
So we're looking in the top-left box of the table; this amino acid is Phe
Step 4: Repeat for the remaining 4 codons
GAG = Glu
CAU = His
UAC = Tyr
GCC = Ala
Answer: The final sequence of amino acids is Phe-Glu-His-Tyr-Ala
The translation stage of protein synthesis – tRNA molecules bind with their specific amino acids
The translation stage of protein synthesis – an amino acid chain is formed
An polypeptide forms as peptide bonds are added in sequence
转载自savemyexams
© 2024. All Rights Reserved. 沪ICP备2023009024号-1