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Translation involves taking the message that's in the messenger RNA and in a sense decoding the message from the language of nucleic acids to the language of proteins or polypeptides. For translation to happen, the messenger RNA goes to the cytoplasm where it is attached to a cellular structure called a ribosome. Ribosomes are two part molecular assemblies consisting of various proteins plus a special kind of RNA called ribosomal RNA. Ribosomal RNA is involved in catalyzing some of the chemical reactions of translation.
In addition to the ribosome, another kind of RNA called tRNA carries amino acids to the mRNA when it is attached to a particular part of the ribosome's small subunit, called a binding site. A critical feature of mRNA and how it is translated is the fact that each three nucleotides in the mRNA is called a codon and it is the codon that is translated. Thus the sequence of codons corresponds to the sequence of amino acids in the polypeptide. You will see that the tRNA molecules have a set of three nucleotide bases at one end that are complementary to a corresponding codon. The bases on the tRNA are called the anti codon. This is critical because the anti codons make the connection between the codons and the correct amino acids that go with each codon.
Scientists have cracked the code involved in translation and given a stretch
of mRNA can tell what the corresponding sequence of amino acids is. Learning
how to do this was one of the two or three big advances in the 20th century
and has laid the foundation for many advances in biotechnology as well as more
basic biology such as the study of evolution.
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Sample mRNA transcript showing codons nucleotide triplets.
Read from left to right. This mRNA has 5 codons. Press on the image to go to
the next step!
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Step 2.
Ribosome moves down one codon so that AUG codon is at the second binding side
UCA codon at first binding site. tRNA for serine comes to first binding site.
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Step 3.
Amino acids Methionine and serine joined by a peptide bond, Ribosome moves over
by another codon. The tRNA carrying glycine comes to the first binding site.
VBS Home page,VBS Course Navigator, Protein Synthesis and DNA replication, Protein synthesis, Translation, Previous Page, Next Page,top of page
VBS Home page,VBS Course Navigator, Protein Synthesis and DNA replication, Protein synthesis, Translation, Previous Page, Next Page,top of page
VBS Home page,VBS
Course Navigator, Protein Synthesis
and DNA replication, Protein synthesis, Translation,
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of page
VBS Home page,VBS Course Navigator, Protein Synthesis and DNA replication, Protein synthesis, Translation, Previous Page, Next Page,top of page
created 03/07/00 pgd