Riboswitches... permit transcription elongation only when bound to a small-molecule ligand. are thought to be recent evolutionary inventions. control transcription or translation by binding small molecules. are most commonly located near the 3' end of mRNAs.
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- . The genetic code is thought to have evolved to maximize genetic stability by minimizing the effect on protein function of most substitution muta- tions (single-base changes). We will use the six arginine codons to test this idea. Consider all of the substitutions that could affect all of the six arginine codons. (a) How many total mutations are possible? (b) How many of these mutations are "silent," in the sense that the mutant codon is changed to another Arg codon? (c) How many of these mutations are conservative, in the sense that an Arg codon is changed to a functionally similar Lys codon?Describe translation. What is the function of the aminoacyl-tRNA synthase?Indicate which of the following items are associated with transcription or translation. This could be in prokaryotes or eukaryotes, or both. Group of answer choices: Translation OR Transcription Sigma binds to the promoter mRNA binds to the small ribosomal subunit Spliceosomes remove introns and splice together exons Nucleotides are added from the 5' to 3' end tRNA anticodon binds to the corresponding mRNA codon STOP codon results in termination
- Consider this list (below) of steps involved in translation. These steps are out of order. TRANSLATION: 1. the small and large ribosomal sub-units unite2. two amino acids join together.3. another tRNA anti-codon bonds with another mRNA codon 4. an initial tRNA bearing a specific amino acid arrives at the ribosome 5. the process continues until a protein molecule is completed6. at the synthesis site, initial mRNA codons are insertedHi, Could you please comfirm the following question. I have selected option c) because tRNA is the the complimentary pairs of mRNA so I figured the oppside end of the tRNA would be the same as the mRNA. When I have tired to double check my answer, no tutor has selected this answer. Thank you in advance, Like mRNA, tRNA has a ribose sugar, U instead of T, and is single stranded. Unlike mRNA, which remains a long single strand of nucleotides, tRNA folds so that some areas pair up. The resulting structure has an anticodon on one end and a site for an amino acid to attach on the other end. There is base complementarity (A pairs with U and G pairs with C) between an mRNA codon and tRNA anticodon.If the amino acid lysine attaches to a tRNA, which of the following anticodons could be at the opposite end of the tRNA molecule? a. UUU and UUC b. AGA and AGU c. AAA and AAG d. UCU and UCA. What is the minumum number of tRNA molecules that a cell must contain in order to translate all 61 sense codons?
- Hydrogen bonds are important in DNA replication and transcription. They are relatively weak chemical bonds. Why is this a desirable feature for DNA? Describe the effect (s) of changing (mutating) the promoter on the transcription of the DNA strand/gene the promoter controls. What happens to protein synthesis if a nonsense codon is inserted into the gene? Explain why a point mutation does not necessarily change the original amino acid sequence. (Explain silent mutations) Choose any pentapeptide composed of five different amino acids. List the amino acids. Present one messenger RNA codon for each amino acids and the sequence of nucleotides on the DNA that originally coded for your pentapeptide.I've attached the table of transcription ans translation for a DNA and Bees work, Genes A and B are exons while C is an intron. Gene A has a silent mutation and Gene B has a nonsense mutation. Please answer the below for me The 3 genes code for different proteins: • Gene A = protein essential for stinger • Gene B = DNA replication enzyme • Gene C = fuzzy hair protein Do you think it matters which protein is mutated? Is one protein more important than another? How would you try to help the bees stay healthy using the information from the mutations?Genetic expression involves transcription and translation. Match the structure or molecule to the step site where amino acid combines with tRNA intron sequences are removed and exons are combined together makes RNA more stable in the cytoplasm region of DNA with sequences that combine with RNA polymerase transcribed strand that will go on to translation connects amino acid to polypeptide chain and leaves tRNA site where tRNA with amino acid enters the ribosome recognized by the protein synthesis machinery enzyme that connects RNA nucleotides to DNA template part of tRNA with nucleotides complementary to mRNA 1. peptide bond 2. 3. antisense strand 4. anticodon loop 5. RNA polymerase 5' cap 6. A site 8. 7. splicing 9. promoter region acceptor stem 10. poly-A tail
- Using the following list of codons describe, using diagrams etc., how information stored in the DNA is translated into a peptide. Be sure to discuss all steps. In other words, use a diagram and give me sequences, transcription and translation steps. Show the sequences of the sense and the other DNA strand, the mRNA and the tRNA’s. UUU -phenylalanine UCU -serine AUG –initiation/methionine CUU -leucine ACU -threonine GUU -valine UAA -TerminationWhat enzyme catalyzes protein synthesis in bacteria? You discover a new broad-spectrum antibiotic that inhibits protein synthesis and named it Compound J. You want to determine the mechanism of action of Compound J. After treating bacteria cells with Compound J, you observe many ribosomes with long polypeptide chains bound to them. Based on this observation, make a hypothesis about which part of the ribosome Compound J is binding and how this specifically affects translation. What evidence supports that proper protein folding is essential to all domains of life? Name and describe the function/s of two specific molecules that help proteins fold in bacteria.Hey, I need help with this: Describe the main events that occur after transcription to generate a mature mRNA and ensure its correct localisation in the cell. Please include splicing, 5' and 3' modifications, RNA export from the nucleus, and how some mRNAs are localised within the cytoplasm. Please be very detailed and long explanation ,and dont copy from google answer in your own words asap please