BIO 311C Chapter Notes - Chapter 17: Hemoglobin, Microrna, Ubiquitin

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Transcription synthesis of rna using information in dna. Translation synthesis of polypeptide using information from mrna. Transcription occurs in the nucleus for eukaryotic cells, and mrna is then transported to the cytoplasm for translation. Central dogma cells are governed by a molecular chain of command with a directional flow of ge(cid:374)eti(cid:272) i(cid:374)fo" dna -> rna -> protein. If genetic code comprised of only two-letters, there would only be 16 available combinations. For each gene, only one strand is used template strand (cid:373)rna is read i(cid:374) the 5" to (cid:1007)" dire(cid:272)tio(cid:374) In bacterial cells, lack of compartmentalization allows translation of mrna to begin while its transcription is still in progress. There is redundancy in the codons but no ambiguity several codons may translate for one amino acid, but one codon never translate for several amino acids. Rna polymerase joins together rna nucleotides complementary to the template dna strand. Can only add nucleotides to 3" e(cid:374)d; 5" -> (cid:1007)" dire(cid:272)tio(cid:374)

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