Protein Synthesis
Protein Synthesis
Cell structure
- 80% of a cell
Cell processes
- Hormones
- Enzymes
- Antibodies
- Neurotransmitters
2. RNA
Three types of RNA:
1. Initiation
- Is the attachment of RNA polymerase to the
promoter and the start of RNA synthesis
- Promoter
o A nucleotide sequence which that
signals the start of transcribing
o A specific place where RNA
polymerase attaches
o Dictates which of the two DNA
strands is to be transcribed
- RNA Polymerase
o An enzyme that binds to the DNA
and separate the strands
o It then uses one strand of DNA as a
template to assemble nucleotides
into RNA
3. Ribosome
- Reads mRNA
- Directs tRNA
- Creates peptide bonds between amino acids
(making polypeptide chains)
4. Amino Acids
- Building blocks of proteins
- 20 different amino acids exist (9 are
considered essential AA)
- Order of amino acids matter. It determines
the function of a specific protein.
2. Elongation
- RNA grows longer
3. Termination
- RNA reaches a terminator and detaches
from the RNA molecule and the gen
- Terminator
Other processes:
RNA Splicing
- 2 regions of RNA transcript
o Intron noncoding region
o Exon coding region
- A process where introns are removed and
exons are joined (by the enzyme Ligase) to
produce an mRNA molecule with a
continuous coding sequence
Translation
- Translation occurs in ribosomes (in cytoplasm)
- All three types of RNA work together during
translation to produce proteins
Steps of Translation
1. mRNA moves to cytoplasm, binds to ribosome
2. tRNA anticodon UAC brings AA (methionine) to mRNA
codon
on
ribosome
Translation
Note:
Methionine always starts sequence/ stop happens when
no
amino
acid
is
brought
with
tRNA
and
peptide
bonds
stop
After Translation
polypeptides move away from mRNA to Golgi Bodycombines with fats/ mineral/ carbs/ vitamins to make
complex protein
mRNA is chopped by enzymes and goes back to
nucleus as free floating enzymes