This molecule is a disposable "photocopy" of the DNA.
What is pre-mRNA?
These structures bind together to form a larger structure called the spliceosome.
What are snRNPs ("snurps")?
This bond maintains the shape of tRNA molecules, and attaches codon/anticodon pairs together with specificity.
What are hydrogen bonds?
The most abundant type of RNA in the cytoplasm.
What is rRNA?
DNA -> RNA -> Polypeptide
What is the central dogma?
A triplet of bases 5'-GGA-3' in the mRNA codes for this amino acid.
What is glycine?
The location of transcription in a cell.
What is the nucleus?
Approximately 50-250 adenine residues.
What is the poly-A tail?
The growing polypeptide chain is transferred from the tRNA at the P site to the amino acid attached to the tRNA in the A site, forming this type of covalent bond between the newly added amino acid and the growing polypeptide chain.
What is a peptide bond?
The 5' cap and poly-A tail serve to protect the mRNA from degradation by these.
What are exonucleases (hydrolytic enzymes)?
A section of the DNA that codes for a protein.
What is a gene?
A particular triplet of bases in the mRNA 3'-GUC-5' codes for this protein
What is Leucine?
In all known life forms, RNA Polymerase binds here.
What is the promoter sequence (TATA box)?
These sections of mRNA are removed by the spliceosome complex.
What are introns?
During initiation, the small ribosomal subunit attaches to the 5' end of the mRNA. Then, the initiator tRNA (anticodon 3'-UAC-5') attaches to the start codon of the mRNA strand. Finally, the large subunit of the ribosome attaches, triggering the start of elongation. At this time, the initiator tRNA is in this site of the ribosome.
What is the P site?
Charges tRNA molecules by attaching an amino acid to the 3' end of the tRNA.
What is aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase?
This is required for initiation of polymerization by DNA polymerase but not required by RNA polymerase to initiate transcription.
What is an RNA primer?
The likely outcome when the following mRNA sequence 5'-AUGGGGUGUUCCAGG...-3' is mistranscribed to yield the following sequence 5'-AUGGGGUGAUCCAGG...-3'
Translation will stop and a functional protein will not be made. (Nonsense mutation)
Required for initiation in addition to RNA Polymerase in eukaryotic cells ONLY.
What are transcription factors?
Two modifications that protect mRNA from degradation.
What are the 5'-cap and the poly-A tail?
The codons UAA, UGA, and UAG signal the end of translation by calling not a charged tRNA, but this.
What is a release factor?
The monomer subunits that are polymerized to create polypeptides.
What are amino acids?
A list of the mRNA codons that do not code for tRNA anticodons, but a release factor.
UGA
UAA
UAG
The amino acid sequence encoded by the following mRNA sequence.
5'-AUGUCCUAUUGG-3'
Methionine - Serine - Tyrosine - Tryptophan
A DNA template of the sequence 5'-TAG-3' will yield this codon in the mRNA.
5'-CUA-3'
The green sections as pictured in the mRNA below.
What are the untranslated regions (3' UTR and 5' UTR)?
Since the mRNA is read in the 5' - 3' direction, sequences in this strand of DNA are reversed to yield the proper codon sequence.
What is the template strand?
DNA, tRNA, mRNA, rRNA, snRNPs, and pre-mRNA are all composed, at least in part, of nucleotides. These molecules can be seen adding to the process of gene expression in this order.
What is DNA, pre-mRNA, snRNPs, mRNA, rRNA, and tRNA?
In prokaryotes, this process does not occur.
What is mRNA processing?
This amino acid sequence is encoded by the following sequence in the template strand of the DNA.
5'-CCTATAGGACAT-3'
Methionine - Serine - Tyrosine - Arginine