CH 461 Lecture Notes - Lecture 50: Peptide Synthesis, N-Terminus, Start Codon

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19 Jul 2018
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The broad outlines of eukaryotic protein synthesis are the same as in prokaryotic protein synthesis. The genetic code is generally the same (some microorganisms and eukaryotic mitochondria use slightly different codons), rrna and protein sequences are recognizably similar, and the same set of amino acids is used in all organisms. However, specific differences exist between the two types of protein synthesis at all steps of the process. Eukaryotes, however, use an initiator met trna met i that is not formylated. Recognition of the initiator aug is also different. Only one coding sequence exists per eukaryotic mrna, and eukaryotic mrnas are capped. Both prokaryotes and eukaryotes initiate protein synthesis with a specialized methionyl trna in uses a specialized cap binding initiation factor to position the mrna on the small ribosomal subunit. Usually, the first aug after the cap (that is, 3 to it) is used for initiation.

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