BIOL 1010U Lecture Notes - Lecture 5: Central Dogma Of Molecular Biology, Transfer Rna, Peptide
Document Summary
Nucleic acids encoding information and transcription - Chapter 3 (section 3. 3) retrieval of genetic information stored in dna: transcription (pages 58 to 63) Chapter 3 (section 3. 4) fate of the rna primary transcript (pages 63 to 66) Use the following wireframe outline to make notes on the content presented in lecture 4. Refer to chapter 3 - sections 3. 3 and 3. 4 (pages 58 to 66) in your textbook and the chapter 3 resources on launchpad to supplement your notes and aid in studying this material. Cells can store and transmit information: what is meant by the central dogma ?". Francis crick"s central dogma stated that: dna codes for rna and rna codes for protein. Messenger rna or mrna: carries instructions for making polypeptides from dna in nucleus into cytoplasm, where it serves as a template for polypeptide synthesis. Makes a single-stranded mrna copy of a sequence of dna nucleotides (gene)