Transcription/Translation Flashcards
(44 cards)
What is the central dogma of molecular biology describing?
It describes the path that genetic information takes in the cell
What is a gene?
The sequence of DNA nucleotides required to tell the cell how to make one type of protein?
What is a genome?
The collection of all the genes found in the DNA of a specie
What’s the intermediate step between DNA and proteins?
RNA
What is the process in which DNA converts to RNA?
Where does it take place?
Which enzyme is used?
Transcription
Nucleus
RNA polymerase (uses the law of complementary base pairs)
What is the process in which RNA converts into proteins?
Where does it take place?
Which enzyme is used?
Translation
Cytosol and rough endoplasmic reticulum
Ribosome (uses the genetic codes -> combinaison of 3 RNA nucleotides called codons)
What are proteins made of?
They are made of 20 different amino acids
What are the differences between DNA and RNA?
In DNA: In RNA:
sugar groups: deoxyribose, ribose
double stranded, single stranded
A, T, C, G , A, U, C, G
What is the role of a stop codon?
It tells the ribosome where to stop
What is the role of the start codon?
It tells the ribosome where to start translation
What is the start codon?
The 1st AUG is a start codon
What are the stop codons?
UAA, UAG, UGA
What is the open reading frame?
From the start codon to the stop codon.
When does transcription begins and ends?
It starts at a promoter and ends at the terminator.
What is translation?
It is the last step in converting the instructions contained in your genes into proteins
What are the three types of RNA involved in translation?
1) Messenger RNA (mRNA)
2) Transfer RNA (tRNA)
3) Ribosomal RNA (rRNA)
What is the purposes of the first type of RNA involved in translation?
(carries the protein-builing information into the cytoplasm)
mRNA carries the instruction for the ribosome on how to make a single protein from the generic code found in DNA.
mRNA carries these instructions out of the nucleus into cytoplasm, where translation takes place.
What is the structure of tRNA?
It is a single strand, folded into a “t-like” shape
They have a three-base anticodon (complementary base-pairs to mRNA) , making sure that only the correct amino acid is added at a given time
What is the purpose of transfer RNA?
It carries the individual amino acids to the ribosome
every tRNA is specific to one amino acid only
What is the purpose of ribosomal RNA?
It combines with proteins to form ribosomes
In the ribosome, rRNA will catalyze the attachement of one amino acid to another
What is the structure of rRNA?
The ribosomes has two subunits, one large subunit and one small subunit
Each subunit is made of both rRNA and proteins
The large subunit contains the catalytic site and the two tRNA binding site (“P-site” and “A-site”)
What are the three steps of translation?
1) Initiation
2) Elongation
3) Termination
What does the initiation complex of translation includes?
The small ribosomal subunit
The tRNA carrying the first amino acid of the protein (methionine)
What does the initiation of translation form to begin?
AND
What is happening in initiation? (translation)
An initiation complex
The initiation complex binds to an mRNA molecule
The large ribosomal subunit arrives an the methionine tRNA binds to the first tRNA binding site on the large subunit (P site)