Week 19: Translation and Proteins, Genotype to Phenotype I Flashcards

1
Q

what is translation

A

Translation is the process where the information carried by the mRNA is used to synthesize a corresponding protein

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2
Q

where does translation occur

A

ribosomes

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3
Q

describe what happens during translation

A

During translation, the sequence of nucleotides in the mRNA is translated into a sequence of amino acids, forming a polypeptide chain that folds into a functional protein.

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4
Q

function of proteins

A

Catalyze (speed up) reactions

Transport: in a cell membrane OR throughout the body

Chemical signaling

Structure in cells & muscular contractions

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5
Q

what are proteins made out of

A

amino acids

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6
Q

what compounds and elements make up an Amino Acid

A

C (carbon)
NH2 (amino group)
COOH (carboxyl group)
H (Hydrogen)
R group

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7
Q

what defines each of 20 different amino acids.

A

R group

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8
Q

True or False: RNA can fold into protein-like shapes that do work in the cell

A

true

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9
Q

what is tRNA

A

Transfer RNA, often abbreviated as tRNA

transfers amino acids to growing polypeptide strand.

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10
Q

what is the “acceptor stem” in tRNA molecule

A

region of tRNA molecule where an amino acid will attach

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11
Q

how long is a codon

A

A codon is a sequence of three nucleotides

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12
Q

function of ribosomes

A

link amino acids together to make polypeptides.

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13
Q

Initiation of tRNA steps:

A
  1. Before translation can start, tRNA needs to be “charged” with an amino acid
  2. The anticodon uses complimentary base pairing to match triplets, or codons, of mRNA bases

3.Small ribosomal subunit and tRNA Met interact with mRNA.

  1. Scan the mRNA for an AUG (start) codon.
  2. When the complex reaches an AUG, the large ribosomal subunit joins.
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14
Q

practice question on pg 19

A
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15
Q

practice question on pg 21

A
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16
Q

practice question on pg 23

A

answer: Leucine

17
Q

Translation cannot start until a “_________” codon is read

A

start

18
Q

what allows the proper tRNA to bind to the correct codon

A

Complementary base pairing

19
Q

Elongation of tRNA:

A
  1. The ribosome moves down one codon (reading mRNA in the 5’ to 3’ direction).
  2. The anticodon of a charged tRNA molecule (complementary to the mRNA codon) binds to the mRNA codon in the A site (aminoacyl site) of the ribosome.
  3. A peptide bond is formed between the amino acid carried by the tRNA in the A site and the growing polypeptide chain attached to the tRNA in the P site (peptidyl site).
  4. The ribosome advances along the mRNA by one codon
  5. The tRNA that was in the A site moves to the P site, and the tRNA that was in the P site moves to the E site (exit site).
  6. The empty tRNA in the E site is released, and a new tRNA with its attached amino acid enters the A site.
  7. this is repeated for each codon in the mRNA until a stop codon is encountered.
20
Q

summarize what initiation and elongation entails

A

In summary, initiation involves the assembly of the ribosome and the placement of the initiator tRNA at the start codon, while elongation involves the repeated addition of amino acids to the growing polypeptide chain.

21
Q

watch video on slide 33 to better understand intiation and elongation

or

watch that section of lecture

or

01:05:00 of lecture

A
22
Q

Describe the first, secondary, tertiary and quaternary structure of protein

(page 41 or watch section of lecture for better understanding)

A
  1. protein formation (1st structure)
  2. 1st structure folds into either alpha (α) helices or beta (β) sheets (2nd structure)
  3. 2nd structure folds into into a tertiary structure
  4. Quaternary structure occurs when 2 or more proteins bind together in order to function. (ex: hemoglobin)