BIOSC 0150 Lecture Notes - Lecture 4: Peptide Bond, Covalent Bond, Amine

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How does dna code for proteins? (dna > rna > proteins) Dna is transcribed into rna which is then translated into protein: dna: information storage, rna: information carrier; intermediate. Complementary base pairing allows for rna transcription (*note, thymine does not exist in rna; uracil pairs with adenine in rna) Messenger rna (mrna) carries the information stored in dna and is always built from. A sequence of 3 mrna bases forms a codon. The genetic code: mrna codons correspond to different amino acids (protein building blocks). Each has a common structure but varies in side chain composition (r-group). A peptide chain is a polymer of amino acids. Peptides form when amino acids (monomers) are joined by a condensation reaction to form a peptide bond. The ribosome catalyzes the reaction: peptide bond: covalent bond that holds together peptide chains; bond forms between carboxyl group of one amino acid and the amino group of the adjacent amino acid. (amide linkage).

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