BISC401 Lecture Notes - Lecture 7: Mitosis, Metaphase, Telomere

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The most common arrangement of protein coding genes is operon. In prokaryotes dna the genes are closely packed with very few noncoding gaps, and the. The translation of the mrna begins even while the 3" e(cid:374)d of the mrna is still being synthesized at the active site of the rna polymerase. Eukaryotic genes encoding protein that function together are most often physically separated in the dna. Each gene is transcribed from its own promoter, producing one mrna, which is generally translated to yield a single polypeptide. Most cellular mrnas are also encoded in several separate regions of genomic dna, called exons, separated by sequences of dna called introns. In eukaryotic cells, the site of rna synthesis nucleus is separated from the site of translation the cytoplasm. Transcription and translation cannot occur concurrently in eukaryotic cells. Eukaryotic genes have: promoter sequence, enhancer sequence, exons. A protein coding gene carries information to code for a specific polypeptide.

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